Earning Vulnerability
It was a second date. The first one involved coffee and the kind of conversation typical of strangers:
What kind of work do you do? Only child or one of many? Cat or dog lover? Do you prefer beaches or mountains?
But *Mike, recently divorced with two girls under the age of 10, felt the questions lacking. He hadn’t wanted his twelve-year marriage to end yet felt lonelier in the marriage than on his own. He felt an urgency to get past the seemingly trivial “get to know you” questions and delve into “the stuff” of intimate relationships.
“I was low-hanging fruit. This was my first date out of the divorce gate.”
So, on this date, hungry for affection and connection, Mike didn’t waste any time on the second date.
Before their appetizers arrived, he told her…well everything but the kitchen sink: his low testosterone level, the frequent verbal put downs he experienced from his ex in their marriage, his belief that his ex-wife treated their daughters like pawns to “get at him.”
“I thought our date went well. I gave her a respectful kiss on the cheek and a hug. But she’s not returning any of my texts, and her phone goes right to voicemail when I call.”
Poor Mike.
“I don’t understand. I thought women like it when a man is vulnerable. Did I scare her off? Am I supposed to act like some Alpha male? What do women want?”
There’s a famous quote by the late and great author, Dr. Wayne Dyer:
“You do not attract what you want. You attract what you are.”
Vulnerability has two sides: the willingness to look within and the willingness to be seen or known by another. Both involve risk. To look within, to possess the courage to self-reflect and look unflinchingly at our beliefs, opens us up to potential emotional pain.
Getting “real” with ourselves is no journey for the faint-hearted.
Mike knows the surface facts of his recent past. He’s:
- A recently divorced father of two young girls
- He was married for 12 years.
- The divorce was not mutual.
The remainder of his story is highly subjective and requires Mike to excavate the cracks in his (currently) unsteady foundation. For example:
Was Mike’s ex abusive or is that a story Mike tells himself?
If Mike’s wife was abusive, what brought him to experience an abusive relationship?
Was he against divorcing someone who abused him?
Before Mike can experience vulnerability with another potential romantic partner, he needs to be vulnerable with himself.
When we look under the figurative hood of our own life, when we are willing to see the parts of ourselves that aren’t so shiny, something changes from the inside out: we discover our self-worth, we remember that we matter and can distinguish between wanting a romantic partner and clinging to someone just to have a someone.
When we explore the slings and arrows of our past with a willingness to see it in the broad daylight of self-reflection and compassion, we aren’t so quick to be vulnerable with others.
After our soul’s journey into the wilderness of vulnerability (thank you, Brene Brown:-) our perspective has altered: a potential romantic partner needs to earn our vulnerability. Vulnerability is no longer a by-product of low self-esteem; vulnerability is now an invaluable gift to share with the right person on YOUR timeline.
*Mike, in his desperation for affection and loneliness, attracted what he was: the absence of a potential partner and a greater sense of loneliness. This pattern of women leaving him is likely to continue, so long as he continues to perceive himself as “low-hanging fruit.”
Vulnerability is both a gift and a wound. When we are willing to go within and explore our wounds with an open and compassionate heart, we receive the greatest gift: self-love.
- Name has been altered to protect the privacy of the individual.