Roxanne Appleby
Masterpiece
- Joined
- Aug 21, 2005
- Posts
- 11,231
From my last post: "Notwithstanding openness, honesty and realistic appraisals going in, it just turned out that one or both parties did not possess what the other wanted or needed in a relationship. There had been no dishonesty – we just didn't know before what we learned over time."McKenna said:My question is, is it only a lie as a violation of trust that you won't tolerate, or is there more? If you trust someone to do something, and they fail to do it even if they said they would, is this too big of a violation of trust to overcome?
It is often the case that a person does not know him or herself what he or she really has to offer, and only learns this over time. The person probably did not deliberately try to mislead. At worst, he was a somewhat unrealistic in his expections of what he himself was capable of. Has he learned what he really has to offer, and more important, what he does not have? Is he honest about that? Be sure to give him the space and freedom to be honest in this - ideally he will do it on his own without any encouragement, but why take chances - it's your life we're talking about here!
You can't get 10 pounds of sugar from a bag that only holds five. If five will do you, and the bag is honestly labeled, take it. If you need 10, or the bag is a lying sack, move on.


