Dear Carolyn: I have been seeing a guy who seems perfect for me. Maybe. He's a bit different from men I've dated in the past, but shares major goals in life with me.
After about six weeks of spending every bit of free time with each other, I suggested exclusivity. Although he's not dating anyone else, he declined. He feels he falls into exclusive relationships too easily and early. And he's new to town, so I worry there's a real factor of relying too much on me for his main social support.
So I think I'm OK with the not-exclusive-but-in-actuality-exclusive framework here. I think? But not really. I'd be very unhappy if he were to date someone else.
So what should I do? I don't want to stop seeing him over this. I understand his hesitation. But the idea of spending so much time with someone in a "relationship" that is so ill-posed bothers me. Obviously, we need to talk, but I don't know what subjects to start with.
Carolyn says: Do you need to talk? I'm not so sure.
It's like writing; if you don't know where to start, that usually means you don't know what you want to say.
From here it appears he's already repeated his favorite mistake and just wants to think it's different this time — or build a more brightly lit pathway out.
When words and deeds are so mismatched that you don't know what to believe, you actually know something really important: that he lacks credibility. He's lying to someone, either to you or to himself.