didn’t want to hurt his feelings because I know he wants to spend time with me. I am also worried he doesn’t actually understand what he got himself into
One of the most useful things I know of? Is to stop doing this. Stop attempting to control the situation by making his decisions for him.
That doesn’t mean not being aware, or being callous. It means
trusting him to make the choices he wants to make in his life, to handle his own feelings, etc.
Yep. I italicised that for durn good reason. Because you don’t have to trust him as a person, much less trust him with you/ your life/ your secrets/ your heart/ etc... to trust him to handle his own life. Even though if you’re in a black & white mindset it probably feels like that.
am just really not sure how to speak with him about this without giving him my entire life story.
Because this ^^^^
Trust issues suck. What feels right (make his decisions for him AND tell him everything) makes no logical sense. It’s a ping ponging back and forth between extremes of no trust v total trust, trying to get closer by pushing him away.
(Like going to a job interview and only telling them all the reasons they shouldn’t hire you, your faults/fears/failings... talking yourself right out of a job, even if you were their BEST candidate &/or mixing up the role of interviewer with friend/therapist who “should” see through the self abasement/fawning to the strengths and assets you ALSO possess. Nope. That’s not their job. Their job is to look at your assets and see if they can use those, not look at your faults. Car parts are useful things, but they don’t belong on your dinner plate, because you don’t eat metal. Food belongs on your table. Assets belong at job interviews.)
Emotions don’t logic so hot, so it can be an ongoing struggle to NOT give someone your entire life story (in an attempt to push them away / here are all the reasons you shouldn’t hire me! Seriously, HUGE reasons, I’m a mess. You have to know what you’re getting into! I’m a disaster!), nor to make their decisions for them (they can’t handle, they want, they need).
Flip it around.
What do YOU want?
Do you want to get to know HIM better? (Do you want to work this job?)
Do you want to spend time with HIM?
Do you like what you know so far?
Every time you start to ask yourself what he wants, what he needs, what’s best for him? (And there will probably be a lot of that.) Stop. As the exact same question... of yourself. What do YOU want? What do YOU need? What’s best for YOU? <<< That’s your side of the street.
Is there some crossover? Absolutely! Doing something nice for someone else, for example, means taking into account their likes/dislikes/wants/desires/etc. As long as we’re doing those things because WE want to? That’s maintaining your personal integrity. Staying on “your side of the street” doesn’t make anyone an uncaring egocentric bitch. Some of the MOST caring & generous people have the best boundaries about what’s their responsibility and what’s not. That’s how they’re able to go the extra mile for people, and still be happy centered and not burned out / resentful / or feeling -much less being- used.
My side of the street, your side of the street.
Making other people’s decisions for them? Is trying to live 2 lives. And it’s exhausting. It’s part of why parents of small children are so exhausted all the time (because they’re having to make decisions for someone else / are wholly responsible for someone else). One of the AWESOME! :D things about dating? They’re adults. They’re able to make their own choices, and take care of themselves. Just like we are. So we can choose to get to know someone, choose to spend time with them... or not. There’s autonomy. You don’t have to do what’s best for THEM. (Nor do you have to manipulate them into not being mean &/or angry &/or abuse/ etc.. If someone is mean to you? Leave. It’s not your responsiltoh to make them happy, or make them not mean, or make them not hurt you. Because it’s THEIR decision how to treat you. It’s your decision to stay with someone who treats you that way, or to leave someone who is a dick to you, and be with someone who makes the decision to treat you well.)
2.02