He kept asking me to get together. I kept saying yes and then he would ask when I was free. I would offer up a suggestion of something fun to do, but keep getting responses like this email below. This guy keeps asking me to do things, but then keeps bailing. How can I tell him I give up and to stop contacting me...without being a bitch?
In interpersonal relationships, these people attempt to manipulate themselves into a position of dependence, but others often experience this passive, self-detrimental behavior as punitive and manipulative. People with this disorder expect others to do their errands and to carry out their routine responsibilities. Friends and clinicians may become enmeshed in trying to assuage the patients' many claims of unjust treatment. The close relationships of people with PAPD, however, are rarely tranquil or happy. Because they are bound to their resentment more closely than to their satisfaction, they may never even formulate goals for finding enjoyment in life. People with this disorder lack self-confidence and are typically pessimistic about the future."
This guy demonstrates many of these qualities in his email to you. Like the Rorschach test, an email can be a window to one's thoughts and feelings. This guy is determined not to commit to a time or date regarding the date. If he "just wasn't into you" by the fifteenth date, a simple phone call or email stating that would have sufficed. He seems incapable of that and seemingly wants you to end the relationship so he doesn't have to. He is also demonstrating his need for dependence by stating his failures and desire to get his "shit together." Is it possible that he wants you to get his "shit together" for him?
You're feeling angry about this situation. This reaction is probably all too familiar to him. On the one hand he is pushing his own internalized anger onto you (projective identification) and on the other hand he's undoubtedly feeling sad at his difficulty to connect with someone in a mature manner.
As far as your response goes.... I would not give him what he subconsciously wants -- an angry response. This is a sad guy with a f'd up problem. Be his mirror and let him know in nice terms what he did and didn't do. He needs to know the proper etiquette so at least with therapy, he'll have a goal to reach.
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