My therapist used to always say that hiding is a way of pushing others away. That there is an aspect of sharing difficult things that is a gesture of intimacy and trust and is often received as such.
I was just thinking about writing something like this and there it was beautifully put.
A lot of the beginning of any relationship is testing and revealing. We generally start out with innocuous thing like our favorite move or dessert. At some point though we have to decide how intimately connected to people we want to be. For those people we feel a special connection to want to further our intimate bond with we'll need to let them in on some of less savory aspects of ourselves. We don't do it for them. We do it because we want them to know all of us and still feel that closeness. I have my husband and a few friends that know more than I ever thought I'd be able to handle sharing. It was such a good thing because I found that they love me even more for sharing such vulnerabilities with them. I also have friend that haven't reacted well to the warm up conversations so I decided that our friendship doesn't need to go very far beyond what it already was. So I didn't let conversations go any further.
PL, It really is all about your comfort level. You get to choose when and how much you want to reveal. I'm glad our conversations have given you some things to think about and ideas on how to proceed. I hope you'll take what I say with a grain of salt. I'm not there with you so I can't possibly know the intricacies of your budding relationship. None of us can. We are all rooting for you! :tup:
I also wanted to point out that if you're not ready to talk about the scars when/if he sees them again, you can voice that. I've told people, who've seen and asked, that they are reminders of a difficult time in my life and that I'm not to a point that I can talk about it. No has ever asked later if I was ready now. Of course take that with a grain of salt as well.
Junebug, Good point to not start a conversation motivated by fear. That's one emotion that seriously muddles up the thinking. I'd also like to add guilt to that list. Sometimes we can feel like we're hiding something and then spill it all out. More muddled thinking and it all comes out wrong.
Jen, How horrible and totally not fair. You were a kid and not responsible for handling something of that enormity. Even if your friend hadn't tried to kill herself that secret was not something you should have been expected to deal with. The grown ups should have been the ones to take care of her and they failed, not you. They are extra crappy for trying to lay their blame at your feet.