Should you apologize for someone accusing you of something you didn’t do?
Elsa asks: My boyfriend went silent on me for two days; he did not answer my texts or my calls. We had not disagreed in any way before. I asked him if he had any problem and he only answered that he is fine, and then went quiet. I insisted and politely asked him to talk to me about anything. He promised to call which he didn’t. I was to travel to his place over the weekend; when I asked if he’d be around he just replied that he will be traveling and did not explain anything. I got worked up and agitatedly asked what this was all about. I asked if he was tired of me and immediately he became angry, insisting that I don’t trust, and demanded that he needed a break. It’s now been a week, and we have not talked. I still love him and I really want to know why he changed all of a sudden, if he has left forever, or he needs some time. But at the same time, I feel like giving him the break he needed because I never did anything wrong to cause this, except for the mistrust he claims after I asked what was wrong with him. Please help me. what should I do? Should I call and apologize or should I wait for him to make the move?
Hi Elsa –
I have to be honest with you. I’m a big fan of apologizing, but I don’t know how in the world you could apologize to this guy – you don’t even know what it was he’s saying you did wrong! What would you say, “I’m deeply sorry for whatever it is that you’re imagining, even though it never actually happened!”?
Frankly, it sounds to me like he’s avoiding you. That might mean he’s struggling with getting closer to you (humans often pull away when they start to feel committed – weird, isn’t it!). Or that he’s thinking of breaking things off with you.
And of course, he has the full right to either one.
But you also have the right to do what’s best for you while he’s doing this. And my thought is that that best thing is for you to Continue reading