Laila couldn’t stop thinking about Donovan.
They’d never really been in a relationship. He wasn’t the settling-down kind. But every time she went out with him, she felt like she was playing the star role in her ultimate fantasy.
Donovan was everything she thought a man should be. Slick, powerful, handsome, and possessed of immaculate taste. He didn’t drink tequila; he drank Patrón. He didn’t wear jackets; he wore Tom Ford.
But Donovan wasn’t as into her as she was into him.
He’d text her at the spur of the moment—when, she suspected, his intended date had canceled on him.
He’d act totally into her, unless someone else he knew walked into his field of vision. Then he’d leave her hanging, sometimes for half an hour while he shot the breeze with his friend.
Laila didn’t like it.
She wanted my advice on how to make Donovan obsessed with her.
Situations like this are always tricky.
It’s my job to help my clients get what they want. But it’s also my calling to help them step into their biggest, brightest, most beautiful life.
And Laila wasn’t going to have that with Donovan.
Donovan was pretty clear about his priorities. Women were accessories to him. He wanted them around so that he looked good, but his focus was on wheeling and dealing. Being seen. Hobnobbing with the right people.
If I told Laila she should forget about Donovan, she’d hear me saying she wasn’t good enough for a man like him.
So my goal was to help Laila see just how much she deserved from a man.
I’d leave it up to her to decide who she’d practice her new skills on.
When a woman is obsessed with a man, she often uses a strategy I call “Look How Much I Have to Offer You.”
(It’s a strategy men use, too. Ever had it used on you?)
She shows him just how far she’s willing to go to earn a place at his side.
She invests time. Emotional energy. Money. Everything she has into giving their budding connection the perfect conditions to grow.
And in return?
He takes all she has and smiles. This is great, he thinks. I’ve got it made.
In her effort to show him how easy-going and undemanding she is, she doesn’t ask for anything from him aside from his presence.
She wants to be with him. That’s it.
So it’s confusing—and heartbreaking—when he refuses to give her even that.
Men do this, too, by the way. They bring a bouquet of three dozen roses on the first date, send romantic texts every hour on the hour for days, offer to take her places or run her errands or wait for her until she’s ready for a relationship—even after she’s told him she’s not interested.
Why?
Because that’s the cultural story we have inherited about the right way to win our true love. It’s a story that’s reinforced in many fictional books and movies.
If a man just lays on the romance thick enough—and he never gives up—he’ll eventually wear her down, and in a moment of vulnerability she’ll fall in love with him.
You know as well as I do that there’s no WAY that script is healthy. It doesn’t work. It borders on stalking. (I’ll tell you a script that works in just a bit.)
But it can be hard to give up the hope of being with the person of your dreams.
Even more so if that person has rejected you over and over again.
Unrequited love turns off that healthy part of our personality that knows when something isn’t going to work out—and probably shouldn’t work out.
It turns on something darker.
The more rejected we feel, the more we become angry. The more we believe we shouldn’t be treated like that. The more self-righteous we feel in our use of aggression or manipulation to get our way.
At that point, it’s no longer about him.
It’s about what he represents.
The life you SHOULD have.
The life he (or his new girlfriend) STOLE from you.
It’s about all the lost opportunities in your life—from the boy who stole a kiss then ignored you in third grade, to the high school boyfriend who dumped you without a backward glance.
Yes, those experiences are painful.
But they’re learning experiences, too.
For Laila, her obsession with Donovan was actually an obsession with a disowned part of herself. She craved being that powerful. She craved being seen.
I encouraged her to start reclaiming in herself the traits she admired in Donovan.
The ability to choose whoever she wanted to be with.
The ability to ask for the best.
She didn’t need him to feel powerful. She already WAS powerful.
What can you learn about yourself from the men you’ve been obsessed with—if any?
How can you claim those traits for yourself?
To James Bauer,
My boyfriend insists on seeing his past two lovers and even remarried his ex-wide (for his benefits). He likes birding and basketball seasons tickets with one gal, and music with the other gal. Going to concerts and jamming. Then he has to celebrate their birthdays, etc.
Doing this does not include me.
He says he sees me the most and that I am the only one he sleeps with.
We have are own houses and I end up staying at his home more often than at mine.
I don’t feel tight about all these women. I asked to meet them so I could assess how or who they really are. And they could meet me.
The answer is always a No
I may be old fashion, but I have tried to understand the reason for the re-marriage. But adding the two other women is so hard for me.
It is a take it or leave it he said.
Life is short Fi what makes you happy. So he is doing that.
I am not looking to be married, but I want a partner. I am 66 years old now.
Jacque, as I read this I find myself slowing down to consider the unspoken message behind what you’ve shared here.
I think you are coming to a realization. You’re recognizing a line drawn in the sand. On one side of that line stands a man you really like with his hand outstretched.
On the opposite side of the man we find a lifetime of learning what a relationship is supposed to look like and a lifetime of discovering what makes you happy.
And it seems you will have to leave one of those two things behind.
Only you can choose which it will be.
Trusting in your wisdom,
James
I wish I had read this years ago, although I am not sure that I would have listened. I spent 13 years chasing after my ex, trying to turn him into a partner & father. Every birthday & holiday or even just over an arguement, I would lavish him with expensive gifts, whether or not I had the money. But in the end, it never worked. And when I finally started to get fed up with being used & started to place REALISTIC demands on him, like refusing to babysit so he could stay out all night or push our own 2 sons aside in favor of doing what was best for HIS older son, he became more & more emotionally abusive. To say the least, it got so bad after 13 years that OUR 10 year old son finally told his father to move out. And then he had the nerve to ask me if he could come back just so that he could keep custody of his older son. I only write this to help show other women in the same situation see that they do deserve better & how bad it can be if they decide to stay. But now, I have a wonderful man that treats me very well. And you played a part in that by showing me what a healthy relationship looks like. I hope that all your readers can have this happy of an ending.
Thanks, Stephanie. Personal examples like that go a long way to help others avoid learning things the hard way.
You expressed this in a way I’ve never heard before. When I look back at the ones I’ve pined over, it wasn’t really them, but the part of me that wants to be powerful.
Thank you.
i loved him so much. i even showed him how badly i wanted him. still he left without any comment. he just disappeared. and , i ask myself,” can i do this again?