Who would you be if you didn’t believe your stories of hurt and fear?

How would you live if you could trust love to make a difference?

Andrew CollierChoosing to Love
by Andrew Colliver

Do these scenarios sound familiar to you?

All these behaviours are signs of a person who has a fear of commitment in relationships.

The fear of commitment is a state of anxiety produced in a person at the prospect of being intensely or intimately involved with any one person, group of people or life situation over an extended period of time.

Choosing to Love examines the impact that a fear of commitment has upon intimate relationships. It sets out patterns of relating that typically play out where one partner is afraid to give fully to the other.

It provides concrete steps through which a person can deal with the fear, and choose more conscious and satisfying ways of being in a relationship.

It also addresses the confusion and hurt experienced by the other partner as they seek to understand the changes in attitude and affection by the one shying away from deeper contact.

The book outlines the stages that a relationship goes through when one partner has a distinct fear of committing. I call this the predictable plot:

  1. Hot pursuit of the woman, often characterised by the rapidity of the man’s advances;
  2. The turning of the tide, where the previously enthusiastic approach begins to fade, and the man’s expressed need for distance begins to emerge;
  3. The yo-yo phase, where the man alternates between being attentive and avoidant;
  4. The end, where it is usually the man who breaks off the relationship;
  5. Encores, where – after the stated close of the relationship, the man returns seeking re-engagement, and a repeat performance of involvement.

The book then identifies and examines the triggers for a man’s fear, and the features of a fear-dominated relationship. A man afraid of commitment will avoid as much as possible anything that seems to him to represent long-term intimacy.

The most common of these triggers are:

A fear-dominated relationship is typically characterised by the following features:

The emotional toll of successive involvements in short-term and/or superficial relationships can be very high for a man with at least some integrity and some insight into the hurt his actions cause the women he has been with. There are four things a person needs to change their habitual patterns:

The book then outlines eleven steps to developing more enduring and functional ways of relating in an intimate relationship, and leads the reader through these in a pragmatic and effective manner.

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