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Bad Men You Should Avoid When
Dating |
by: Nicholl McGuire |
Women always say, “I didn’t
know he was like that” when their boyfriends perform acts that
cause everyone around them shame. In some cases
they really weren’t aware of the boyfriend’s mischievous deeds,
but in other cases women knew well in advance they just hoped he
would stop.
Most women are not stupid, gullible, dumb, or any other name
critics choose to call them for the selections in men they make.
For some, they truly
had no idea their boyfriend meant bad news for them. The
ever-popular question of, “Why did she get herself involved with
him anyway?” continues
to loom over their heads and the reasons vary depending on whom
you ask. Some women may have found out about their problem
boyfriend and
stayed because of love, status, money and/or power. Others may
have stayed because they didn’t want to carry the guilt of
leaving their children’s
father over issues they feel could be resolved. Still many women
feel they can change him. As long as women continue to believe
that the power of
sex, money, counseling, personal sacrifice or a host of other
strategies to change a bad man will work, they will continue to
subject themselves to
mental and physical abuse. These strategies simply will never
work for some men. There comes a time when women will have to
get off their knees
whether she is praying to God or pleading to her mate to change.
She will have to stand up carrying her self-respect in hand and
walk right through
the door of “end the relationship now.”
The following advice is written for women who haven’t yet made a
commitment or a baby with a “bad boy.” She may be struggling
with whether she
is ready to settle down with him, distance herself from him or
keep him as a friend. Although the best advice is not to offer
to carry him or his
burdens and just leave him alone, there will be those women who
will still stay. If those women choose to stay, they have
committed themselves to
a hard life of many restless nights, aches and pains at times
mentally and/or physically and they most likely will past
negative behaviors to their
future children and their children.
The Liar – In the beginning of the relationship, you caught him
in a few white lies. He had what seemed like convincing excuses;
therefore you let
him get away with them. Now the lying has increased and the
excuses have become minimal if not at all. Actions you may want
to consider are the
following: Approach him not only with what you think, but what
you know; in other words have proof. Stop taking his lying
lightly. Let him know that
this behavior you will not accept any longer. If he chooses to
continue lying, then tell him you will have to end the
relationship for good. Once you
have made a decision that you are leaving, begin to make efforts
to not be contacted by him (change your cell phone number, block
his email
address, put places you hang out frequently on hold, and avoid
telling mutual friends about your personal whereabouts, thoughts
and feelings. You
must not leave and then go back to him, he will only get better
about lying to you over time.
The Player also known as The Pimp – This man is obsessed with
being contacted or making contact with the opposite sex. He will
use cell phone,
email, your house phone or friends to make contact with whomever
he meets. He will leave a trail of evidence whether it is the
popular piece of
paper that slips out of his pocket with a phone number without a
name, restaurant receipts, hotel charges, cologne or jewelry
gifts, read and sent
email that sits in his account that he forgot to delete. He
begins to create a pattern in his actions when you have become
old and someone else
becomes new. Look out for this repetitious pattern. He may
develop his pattern after work on a daily basis working later
and later nights at the
office then when he comes home he is providing almost too much
detail about what happened at work or not at all. Another
pattern he may create
may be choosing a hobby or interest that is very unusual to his
personality and attending this faithfully, what you can do to
find out if he is sincere
is offer to pick him up from the pottery class on some nights.
Watch his reaction. There may also be the weekend pattern of
always “needing to get
away, have some time to myself, or I’m so busy with errands.”
All the while making little or no time for the two of you to go
out and be seen
together. When you suggest new places to visit, he finds an
excuse to take you to the same area you both are familiar to
keep from running into the
other woman or women. He finds a way, anyway, to travel to
places without you regularly using an excuse such as “I’m going
to my mother’s house
or hanging out with Rick, Joe or someone you never heard of
Frank.” Be careful family and friends will cover for him. He
will call you, at times when
he knows you are out and about to see if you will be in the
proximity where he will be entertaining the other woman or
women. He is protective of
his cell phone and his computer; if you tried to check either it
maybe password protected. You may want to consider whether
having to worry over
your man’s whereabouts is worth all of this aggravation. In
time, you will become insecure, angry for no apparent reason,
and develop a since of
distrust toward everyone you meet. This is baggage you don’t
need.
The Thief – He has been around when things go missing. At first
you didn’t suspect him and thought items had just been misplaced
or he blamed
someone else for taking them. Yet, you have always had a funny
feeling in your gut that he was the one who made off with your
dad’s tools, took
your favorite CD, helped himself to some cash sitting around,
and other important items. It is time to come up with a plan,
set him up. The kind of
plan you come up with can’t be easily figured out by him and if
you sincerely want your restless conscience to be at peace, then
go to great lengths
to figure out whether he is trustworthy. Time is money and the
longer you stay with him, the more items will go missing.
The Hustler – He is always thinking of a way to separate people
from their money illegally. From identity theft to standing on
the street corner selling
drugs, he always has a knot of money and doesn’t mind living
lavishly. Now you may think that what he has told you about his
daytime job is paying
the bills, but the truth of the matter that job didn’t pay for
the designer clothing and expensive jewelry you wear; instead it
was the second one you
may or may not know about. This man is dangerous. He has enemies
and one day some one will catch up with him, you or anyone who
associates
with either of you, and the sight won’t be pretty. You must ask
yourself this question, is he worth putting your life and
everyone else’s lives around
you in danger?
The Abuser/Controller – You can never do anything right. He is
often critical, walks around with an attitude and every
opportunity he has alone he
wants you to stop living your world to be with him. In the
beginning of the relationship, you justified his negative
personality with excuse after
excuse. Whether he is physically ill, illiterate, disabled or
mentally disturbed and on medication, you have a right to
explain how you feel about him to
him. You may have done this already and got knocked to the
ground whether verbally or physically. You may have told
yourself that things will get
better and he is making an effort to change. Well that is good
if he is sincere about becoming a better man; however, he can
make those strides
without you living with him and subjecting yourself to his name
calling, mood swings, choking, punching, and grabbing. There are
no rewards in
heaven given to women who allow themselves to be abused by men.
There was only one Christ in the Holy Bible and you are not He.
(Read more
about the abuser in an article I wrote entitled, “How To Know
Your Boyfriend Is Abusive” at this site.)
The Mooch – You have invited him once again on an outing and he
never has any money in his wallet. During inopportune times, he
says he needs to
stop at the ATM and you know there is none even close to where
the two of you are located. When he offers to take you out, he
usually picks a
place that he doesn’t have to pay much (despite the fact that
when it was on your tab he ordered steak and another time
lobster!) He drives your
car and doesn’t fill it up, when you mention it; he finally puts
some gas in the tank -- a measly $5 or $10. Holidays come and go
with very little if
any acknowledgement from him. Yet, you bought him (and possibly
his relatives) really nice gifts whether it was a holiday or
not. He displays
affection, says all the right things, and listens to your
concerns only when he knows he needs something from you. If you
choose to continue a
relationship with this man you have options and they are as
follows. You could stop being so generous and treat him how he
treats you. For
example, when you invite him out, treat him to the kind of
places he takes you. Put a limit on how often he drives your
car. Avoid helping him when
he is in a bind since you know he won’t help you. Make yourself
unavailable to run errands for him and anyone associated with
him (that includes his
children by a previous relationship, his mother, sister or
brother.) If he begins to see you are no fool, he won’t continue
to run over you and will grow
to appreciate you. However, if he doesn’t you will be making it
easy for him to walk away from you without you having to break
up with him.
The Drunk/ Drug Abuser – How many times have you seen him
intoxicated or using drugs? Is he fun, angry, disgusting or
depressed afterward? Are
most of the relationship problems you have been facing
associated with this type of behavior? If so, then you will have
to consider whether or not
you will help him get counseling from a distance, continue to
live with him and endure the abuse, leave him alone altogether
or create an intervention
for him that includes a professional counselor, family and
friends who have all been affected by his negative ways. If he
consistently refuses help,
then for your own sanity and safety, leave him alone.
About The Author
Nicholl McGuire is a Published Poet, Freelance Writer and
Author. Her book Laboring to Love an Abusive Mate speaks to
women who haven't reached
a decision to leave an abusive situation, visit http://stores.lulu.com/nichollmcguire
for more info.
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