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  • To choose a partner is the most important job interview we are ever asked to carry out.

  • Around half of us get it very wrong, not because we are inept, but because we are wounded.

  • We might think that there would be a minimum of training and some hazard lights to guide

  • us. But our dedication to public safety ends squarely at the door of our dating interviews.

  • Were supposed to need to be left strictly alone to follow our (misfiring) instincts.

  • Out of some peculiar fear of infringing on our liberties, we are abandoned to make our

  • own beautiful disasters, generation after generation, without drawing the slightest

  • benefit from the sufferings and late-life realisations of others. And therefore, with

  • horrifying predictability, the most cautious types routinely come adrift without discerning

  • the multiple cataclysms they are incubating - and which may take a good two decades fully

  • to come to light.

  • What, above all else, clouds our judgement is something we have scarce control over and

  • are seldom granted the opportunity to explore in sufficient depth: our childhoods, and more

  • particularly, our messed up childhoods, for the single greatest predictor of unhappy adult

  • love is, in a process that layers misery upon misery, simply and squarely our miserable

  • time at the hands of significant others in our early lives. It’s expecting too much

  • to think that one might have been substantially unloved or troubled as children and then grow

  • up to make any sort of reasonable or successful choices in our adult years. The best we could

  • aim for is a live appreciation that our instincts are liable to be profoundly unreliable guides

  • to our future contentment - which might inspire a commitment to getting someone else, a wise

  • impartial judge, to check and help us with our homework.

  • This is some of what happens when our interviewing capacities have taken a hit:

  • 1. We can’t sift: What singles out the emotionally damaged from

  • the more robustly healthy is not their involvement with mad candidates, these are everywhere

  • and are often irresistibly delightful on the outside, it is their propensity for being

  • unable to spot the problems in due time and extricate themselves with the requisite ruthlessness

  • and decisiveness. Above all, a difficult childhood inducts us into getting interminably stuck.

  • 2. We aren’t a friend to ourselves The reason for the stuckness is hugely poignant:

  • that we don’t like ourselves very much. Therefore, when someone blows hot and cold,

  • lets us down, plays games with our minds, makes and then routinely tramples on promises,

  • denies us tenderness and swears they won’t do that nasty thing to us again and then promptly

  • does, our first, second and hundredth impulse is never simply to up sticks and leave. Our

  • tendency is to wonder what we might have done to provoke the problem, whether there is something

  • that we have misunderstood and whether we might learn to be more skifull in not upsetting

  • them going forward. Our past gives us a touching but ultimately disastrous tendency to think

  • against ourselves - and give an unnatural degree of credit to the other. It might take

  • us a decade to make a simple realisation that someone else could have reached in an evening:

  • that theyre not worth it.

  • 3. We can’t disappoint anyone Looking after ourselves requires a rare skill:

  • a capacity - at selective moments - to disappoint another person in the name of our own protection.

  • To remain sane, we may have to say no to a party, decline a friend’s suggestion, swerve

  • an invitation - and in love, upset someone else substantially - even when they have,

  • in many areas been kind to us. To someone who doesn’t possess a full tank of inner

  • love, how dare one turn down the love of another, even if it comes wrapped in tricky or poisonous

  • elements? How, given who one is, dare one make someone else cry?

  • 4. We hope too much Children who grow up in the company of difficult

  • adults cannot change or get rid of their care givers. From a position of impotence, they

  • settle on doing one thing extremely well: hoping against hope that these adults will

  • magically change and learn to be kind. If they just hold on long enough, and are sufficiently

  • polite and compliant, then the difficult adult will take mercy and alter. These suffering

  • souls then take their misguided patience out into their adult relationships, with similarly

  • negligible results. They are barred from a crucial insight: that health at points involves

  • a lively capacity for giving up on certain people.

  • 5. We are overly scared of being alone Our readiness to exit an unsatisfying relationship

  • is partly a measure of our confidence that being on our own will be bearable and open

  • us up to future, more gratifying partners. On both scores, an unhappy regard for oneself

  • will continuously undermine our reasonable expectations. Who else would have us and,

  • worse, how could it be pleasant for any decent person to spend time nurturing someone like

  • us? How much better to watch our best hopes crash helplessly against the shores of our

  • current partner’s obdurate and quietly or even unconsciously sadistic personality?

  • 6. We find kindnessboring’ A troubled past will make us unusually unforgiving

  • towards genuine kindness when it comes along. Nice people feel instinctively, boring, unsexy,

  • queasiness-inducing and eerie. We may be unable to quite put a finger on what feels wrong

  • with our very kind date. We may say there was no chemistry or that our interests don’t

  • align. But if we were able to know ourselves better, what we would express would sound

  • a lot stranger: that certain candidates feel wrong because we know they will be unable

  • to inflict upon us the sort of suffering that weve grown up to feel is essential to our

  • sense of feeling loved. They are wrong because they threaten to be kind.

  • **

  • In a better arranged society, there would be instruction in the art of love-interviews

  • from an early age - and a process of vetting at least as strict as that applied to learner

  • drivers. We would not be left to crash our lives without some prior help and counsel.

  • For now, many of us should at least be aware of the extent to which our impulses will be

  • profoundly misleading when the early years were filled with suffering. We shouldn’t

  • blame ourselves, just accept that we need to learn how to do a very unfamiliar and for

  • us rather extraordinary thing: treat ourselves well.

  • If you enjoyed our film, you might be interested in our range of books

  • on topics such as relationships. To explore click the link on your screen now.

To choose a partner is the most important job interview we are ever asked to carry out.

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