Fear of commitment is a learned phobia. The dread of sharing intimacy with another person or the fear of making promises one feels they may not be able to keep generally develops in people who have been hurt or betrayed in previous relationships. Sometimes these relationships are with family, friends or lovers. Living with this fear can prevent one from being able to build meaningful relationships and can lead to a lonely and unhappy life. While it can be a long and difficult task, learning to overcome this fear of commitment is well worth the effort it takes.
One should carefully examine the events of their past to try and identify just where the fear of commitment originated. One way is to write out your thoughts as you take a look at what transpired in your past to create the present you. Seeing them written out can often provide the clues as to why you are the way you are, and offer clues as to how to change. If such self-examination is hard for you, then engaging the help of a professional councilor may be necessary. Often the roots of this phobia lie in the observation of relationships with your parents, family or the problems of friends.
The fear of commitment is quite often the mask overlaying the fear of being hurt, psychologically even moreso than physically. It is entirely human to seek close relationships with another person. It is regrettable that this intimacy can often be betrayed, and the fear of experiencing that same emotional pain again can cause a fear of intimacy.
The best way to deal with this in future relationships is through an honest discussion of these fears with someone you are trying to build a new relationship with. Explain that while one may not believe the same hurt will come from them, that you do wish to build the relationship slowly so as to be more assured it is right. This may include putting off the discussion of marriage commitments until some future time when the fear has been alleviated through a long-term non-painful relationship. One who has been dealing with a fear of commitment should also resist the temptation to move in together too quickly. This aslo is a commitment that should not be engaged in until time has helped heal the old wounds.
Sometimes the fear of commitment is actually caused by a fear of the unknown. Relationships are not areas of your life that you can completely control, so it makes some people so fearful that they will avoid intimacy rather than risk something happening to them that is not of their personal doing. To defeat this, keep focused on this aspect of your personality and start small by trusting some things. As time goes by and disaster hasn’t struck, you can build on these successes until you have overcome the obsessive need to control every aspect of your relationships. Understand that they are two-way streets and that your partner must have an equal ability to develop the relationship.
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I think it is understandable that we fear being betrayed or hurt, and for some this is what can lead to a fear of committment. It’s difficult to get over.
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this was really helpful for me.
i am 5 months out of a 3 year relationship. my ex and i have reestablished contact about 6 weeks ago. this time around it would seem we are taking the time we didn’t initially (although we did sleep together a few times–we now are stopping that behavior because it is confusing us).
most information out there says commitment phobic partners should be left at first sign of trouble. i don’t think this is true–especially when the partner is being open and trying to decipher the many aspects of their fears/feelings.
thanks for keeping hope alive!
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Wow Lenny. I found a bit of comfort in your message. My ex and I were together for almost three years. We broke up early on and got back together too quickly. We lived and slept together and decided to stop doing that about 7 months ago. We broke up (this time I thought for good) about 6 weeks ago. We re-established contact about 1 week ago. I’m trying to take my time this time and not run away. He is an amazing man and I’ve envisioned him being my husband and father to my kids, but I always wonder in the back of my mind “what if someone else comes along who is better than him?” If I could just get that thought out of my head, we would be unstoppable! Good luck with your relationship and thank you for sharing.
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My ex and I were together a year and a half. He has all the classic signs of commitment phobia, and his is earned: He has been married three times, and each time, his wife left. Their leaving usually had more to do with them than with him. But he did have, I think some sort of pattern of finding the same type of person. I am like none of those women. But the damage has been done. He left me on July 20. Last year, it was July 19, and he was back by mid-September. I made the mistake of taking him back too quickly, but the issue appeared to be different at the time. I am debating whether I will hang in there now that I understand the issue a bit better. But I don’t need this to be an annual event, either.
Elizabeth, you always may “think” you will find better, but with the exception of their basic character and values, men are fundamentally the same. If he’s truly as amazing as you say he is, there should be no doubt as to what you will do.
Lenny, I agree with you. Sometimes, you’re better off with the devil you know. When people make a marriage vow, it’s for better or for worse. It may be that this particular issue is your “worse.” But if you have the fortitude to take it on, you absolutely should. If not you, then who?
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