If you’ve ever had someone just “disappear,” for no apparent
reason, then you’ve experienced “fear of intimacy.” I’m referring to emotional
intimacy. Psychologists state, “when individuals are faced with the fear of
intimacy, stemming from an awareness of the risks involved, they may impair the
relationship by avoiding taking these risks.” That’s a fancy way of saying that
they leave. Although the term “fear of intimacy” is new, the phenomenon is not.
My friend Stephanie calls it the “freak out dance,” Evelyn refers to frightened
men as “borderline personalities,” and Judy just says that they’re “lost.” I see
it as an extreme form of ambivalence.
When I met Adam through JDate, he was (too) recently widowed. Although claiming
to want another “long-term relationship,” this is how it played out. On Monday,
we had a great conversation, but he ended it by saying that he needed “more
alone time.” On Tuesday, he said that he was looking forward being with me and
asked me out for Saturday. On Wednesday, he told me that he was “dealing with a
lot right now” and needed to “work some things out.” On Thursday, he said that
he wanted to see me Friday and Saturday. We had a great time on Friday, but on
Saturday, he said, “How would you feel if things didn’t work out between us?”
If Benjamin’s JDate profile was to be believed, he personified everything I love
about New York Jewish men—warm, funny, and very Jewish! Okay, he was 42 and
never married, but based on his “Ideal Relationship,” he seemed ready. I also
was ready to go the distance—all 3,000 miles. He wrote:
I run to the drugstore at 2:00 a.m. to buy tissues when she is sick. We drink
out of the same soda bottle and double dip in the ice cream container. We dine
on Yonah Schimmel’s knishes and have cheesecake in the fridge and a brisket in
the oven. We light Shabbos candles on Friday night and each other’s fire on
Saturday. We give to the UJA. We have children who win the Nobel Prize and the
Stanley Cup. We kvell over our grandkids and brag to everyone how smart and
talented they are.
For four months, we talked on the phone for at least an hour a day. He never ran
out of ways to keep me laughing. But, between all the humor, I learned that he
had moved back to his childhood home to take care of his mother and worked long
hours as a hospital radiologist. He sent me a ticket to visit him in New York.
He was late to the airport and told me that he would be working every day until
my departure. However, he had my itinerary planned, so I wouldn’t miss a minute
of all that New York had to offer, and he added that we could get together each
night after he finished work. I saw more of New York than I saw of Benjamin.
Cliff’s MO was the “preemptive strike.” He contacted me through JDate and, the
morning after our conversation, sent me an e-mail, filled with mixed messages.
He wrote, “I am pretty sure [not “positive”] that we don’t have enough in common
. . . however, I find you to be “an incredible lady, very intelligent, and very
attractive.” He added, “It’s too bad that we don’t have a bit more [now it’s
just “a bit”] in common.” Between the lines, he seemed interested.
A month later, I tested my hypothesis and e-mailed him. “Perhaps we just had a
‘bad connection’. Would you like to give it another try?” He wrote back, “I
thought you were terrific . . . incredibly intelligent . . . and very
attractive. However, I got the impression that you have more sophisticated
tastes . . . Knowing that, if you would like to give it another try, that would
be great. If not, I would understand.” He signed off, “I am hoping you say yes!”
Hadn’t I already?
We made plans to get together. But, a little later, he sent me an e-mail. “I
remembered something else . . . ” and recounted another “difference.” “If that’s
a problem, I understand. If you would rather pass on me, maybe just don’t
respond . . . I hate rejection. I do hope to hear from you again.”
I wrote back, “I won’t deny our ‘differences’, but, from what I know about you,
I like you.” But it was too late. He wrote, “What you said was sweet, but . . .
I would feel inadequate. This is . . . my insecurity. I hate rejection.” Who was
rejecting whom?
Now I’m developing a fear of intimacy.
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