I feel so insecure about my relationship with Shrek. There's this girl whom he likes to go out to movies alone with. Although he told me that he doesn't even consider her a friend because he feels like he couldn't trust her completely, I don't get why he wouldn't let her know that he's no longer single and that he's got me as his girlfriend (oh btw I bumped into both of them the other day when they were queueing to get movie tickets, and he introduced me to her). I'm 95% certain that this girl likes him! So if he keeps on acting like he's single then who knows one day she might make a move on him!
I've been asking him about her, I know it's intrusive and that he hates it when I do it. I don't want this to damage our relationship either. He wants me to trust him cos he trusts me completely, and he said that if I assume that he's gonna hurt me from the beginning then we're doomed from the start. I know this is true, but how can I trust him when he's acting like he's single and that he doesn't want to acknowledge to his friends that I'm his girlfriend?
So I found an article below, I thought it's a really good article and it totally reflects my current situation (except for the fact that Shrek and I aren't husband and wives, hehe). I will try to step back and give him some space. But it still doesn't solve the issue as to why he doesn't wanna let people know that he's taken and that I'm his girlfriend..
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The biggest killers of many relationships are a
lack trust, jealousy and a lack of space. Many wives do not realise that
the more they watch a spouse, question him and want to know about the routine things he does, is the more unattractive they appear, the more claustrophobic the relationship becomes and the quicker they send him into the arms of someone else.
Many partners do not also appreciate that they cannot be all things to their spouses who need stimulation, perhaps intellectual, leisure or otherwise, from others. If couples love one another and trust one another there is no need to spy on one another. Problems begin when there has not been much attention and appreciation between couples and suddenly one partner seems to be giving that attention somewhere else. It is easy to demand that a partner stop such connections but much harder to make it stick because something could be missing from the home and the action will merely be repeated quietly later on because the real cause is not being addressed.
Instead of asking any questions, let it be and begin to review your parts in the relationship. Could you do more things together? When did you last praise him? Or he praise you? When did you last send gifts to one another, play silly games, have a night of wild passionate love? What I am trying to say is that many relationships die of sheer boredom, of taking each other for granted and doing the same old things all the time. Along comes a person who seems exciting, who makes the partner feel relaxed and different and whammo! Problems afoot. But focusing on that person will not make the problems go away, if there are any. He will just switch to someone else down the line because you would be focusing on the symptoms, not the cause, whatever they are.
He has been open about talking to her. He hasn't hidden it. Over to you now to have the courage to examine what could be missing by having some communication with him and start focusing on you both. It is easy to start blaming others for things going wrong, but
the third party is never important. It really is about the two of you and what you wish for your relationship. You cannot afford for him to see you as unattractive (you mentioned him getting 'an earful'). If that is all he has to look forward to, he will look elsewhere. Once attraction goes, it cannot be manufactured and
often couples concentrate on the negatives instead of simply loving and valuing their partners.
Look at it realistically: So he answers all your questions and tells you what they have been talking about and you're still not happy? What then?
You cannot curtail his movements like a child and you will only make the situation worse with your negative stance. I would ask him just one question:
"When can we go away for a wild weekend together? We need some time to ourselves, just do something different, don't you think?" Then also have a long chat on the weekend to see how you both can get more from the relationship and build it from there. Otherwise any other negative action will merely leave you feeling stressed, anxious, vulnerable and very insecure as you cannot watch him 24/7 and he might simply retreat from you to avoid the confrontations.
Article by Elaine Sihera.