Many breakups or divorces occur due to disagreements and misunderstandings between partners. However, there are three main differences which must be discussed and agreed upon from the start:
• Children-to have or not to have, how many
• Employment-who will be the major breadwinner and who will stay home with the kids
• Dishonesty-to include lying and infidelity
Disagreements and dishonesty about finances as well as communication and control issues are also red flags they can turn into deal-breakers. Many of these issues may be resolved if both partners are willing to address them openly and honestly.
Any form of abuse, whether physical, mental, emotional, or substance abuse is a deal-breaker for many. Excessive lying, often called pathological lying, may be a deal-breaker as well. Public criticism or scorn, constant correction and scolding like one may do with a child may also be deal-breakers. If one partner enters a relationship with excessive debt, a lengthy conversation may be required regarding financial issues and money management to avoid a deal-breaker.
Other deal-breakers are more personal on an individual level. Liking and accepting a partner's family, children and friends is a deal-breaker for some people. Egotism, insecurity, low self esteem and jealousy sometimes go hand in hand and can be deal-breakers for many. Even poor eating habits and no exercise routine are turnoffs for some.
Sometimes, one person's deal-breaker is tolerable to someone else. Thefrisky.com reports many individuals' deal-breakers, some of which are contradictory. For some women, men who want too much sex are out, while for others not enough sex or really bad sex is a deal-breaker.
Dates that are overly intellectual are turnoffs for some women while for others, those who are not smart enough don't make the cut. A date who is too silent or too verbose, an overly dirty talker or just plain gives "too much information" can be a deal breaker. Even a date who says "I love you" too soon or too frequently can be a turnoff.
Criticizing one's weight, grooming or clothes can be a deal-breaker. Also are tattoos, too many eccentricities or liking Barry Manilow.
The list goes on and on. No two people have the exact same deal breakers. While we know what we want-chemistry, loyalty, good communication, honesty and kindness-the deal breakers are as varied as snowflakes. Exploring, defining and knowing your personal deal breakers can save a lot of wasted time on relationships that may fail in the long run.
Published by Nancy Travers
Relationships - we all want them and we all need them. I can teach you how to get them and keep them. I am Nancy Travers, a Licensed Clinical Social Worker and I want to be your relationship counselor for da... View profile
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