9 Tips for Anyone Who Dates Emotionally Unavailable People



“When someone tells you who they are, believe them.”
~Maya Angelou




After having been a rebound girl the summer of 2013, I swore I would never get involved with another emotionally unavailable man who had baggage and was a poor communicator.


I thought I was a pro at all of the tell tale signs. Until I met X in 2015.


He came on very strong in the beginning, telling me he deleted his dating app after our first date, that he turned down other dates because he didn’t want to waste time with other girls, and showed me in more ways than one that I was his priority.


Things were too good to be true.


Things were at the height of our relationship, and I use this word loosely because it really wasn’t a relationship.


After a heavy night of drinking he confessed that he was scared to get into another relationship because he
associates them with pain and feeling trapped. He admitted that he puts up walls, shuts down, and he just couldn’t bear to go through another break-up again.


We hadn’t even made it official and he was talking about breaking up. He told me he didn’t want to lose me, nor did he want his baggage to ruin what we had. He would give this a try.


This lasted for all of about twenty-four hours when he ended it. Poof. Gone.


Sucker punch to the gut.


How can someone do a 180 overnight? It dawned on me that he probably had one foot out the door the entire time.


Why did I, yet again, get ahead of myself and trust someone that I barely knew?


When I saw him on a dating site six weeks after the split (after him telling me earlier that he didn’t want to see other people; he just wasn’t ready for a relationship), I panicked.


I confronted him about it and he took no accountability for ending things the way he did. He has convinced himself that he is being honest with me. He became hostile and angry that I contacted him.


I came to realize he will find another awesome girl and do the same thing to her to fill his void of being alone Lather. Rinse. Repeat I sent myself in to a six-week black hole, and I will never get those six weeks back. I always thought of myself as someone who had high self-esteem , but I began questioning why I was upset over someone who shut me
out so intensely and quickly.


Why was I upset about someone whose opinion of me, quite frankly, doesn’t matter? The people whose opinions
matter are the ones who have actually stood by me through thick and thin.


Here’s what I learned through my pain:


1. Don’t put someone on a pedestal.
They are not perfect and you will always be disappointed if you continue to do so.


2. Take time to get to know someone before jumping to conclusions about your future.

It’s through tough times when you get to know someone the most, not when things are good.


3. Trust your gut instincts.
Even if he or she seems to be doing everything “right,” sometimes you need to trust your gut and use your head.


4. You will be okay.
I have gone through this before, and I will go through heartache again. Each time I pick up the pieces of my broken heart I learn a little bit more about who I am, what I deserve, and what I am capable of giving someone. I can rest my head each night knowing I stayed true to myself,
and you can too.


5. You can’t fix anyone.
I have learned this many times, the hard way. Trying to fix someone else chips away at your soul. Worry about yourself and let them figure themselves out when they are ready.


6. Just because a romantic relationship failed, that doesn’t mean you are a failure.
I look at the many healthy relationships I have in my life with friends, family, and coworkers, who choose to be in my life and are always there for me. I don’t want to be in anyone’s life that doesn’t want me in it.


7. Don’t apologize for having feelings.
I truly believe being able to express emotions is a sign of strength, not weakness. Anyone who is incapable of
accepting or reciprocating feelings is missing out on one of the most rewarding gifts in life.


8. Don’t ignore red flags.
Looking back, I saw the flags and never raised questions because my heart was in too deep. I would have saved myself a lot of time if I had the confidence to speak up.


9. Be upfront early on about what you want.
If the other person is intimidated or scared and runs away, better early on then months or years down the road. Don’t assume they feel the same way as you do.


I have so much to offer, and you do too. But some people just aren’t open to receiving it. So long as we’re willing to
acknowledge that and move on, we’ll find the love we’re looking for.

DO YOU KNOW? YOU MUST READ THESE HEALTH TIPS.



Here are some everyday things we do but we have never put them into consideration in terms of our health.
Let's take a close look at them.
*1.* Any food you consume after 8 P.M. everyday is equally a poison to your body?
*2.* If you can follow the water therapy for 3 months religiously, your skin, your body and your organs begins to function well?
*3.* Do you know Breakfast is the most important meal of the day; If you must skip any meal, it shouldn't be breakfast?
*4.* Do you know too much red meat is very dangerous to your health?
*5.* Do you know people who smile always live longer, look younger and are more healthier than their counter part who does not?
*Listen:*
You can use the most expensive cream on your body; you can take the best care of your body, but *HONEY* with *BANANA* can make your skin glow, make it look good and make people ask you the kind of cream you are using.
*6.* For every bottle of soft drink you consume, you have just taken 9cubes of sugar, and it takes 7 days for it to wash off your body; men increase their likelihood of having a heart attack by 20 percent.
*7.* Fried meat is a killer; It is damaging your body.
*8.* People who do not take breakfast are going to have a lower blood sugar level.
*9.* Drinking water only when you are thirsty is obtaining a license to damage your liver.
*10.* Holding your urine when you are supposed to let go is another way you are damaging your liver?
*11.* Adding salt into your food when it is already served is another way of slowly poisoning yourself and vital organs?
*12.* Observing the routine of proper eating: Eat BREAKFAST like a KING, LUNCH like a PRINCE and DINNER like a BEGGAR would help you live longer.
Please take care of your health, for HEALTH is WEALTH
*7 Biggest brain damaging habits*
1: Missing breakfast
2: Sleeping late
3: High sugar consumption
4: More sleeping specially at morning
5: Eating meal while watching TV or computer
6: Wearing Cap/scarf or socks while sleeping
7: Habit of blocking/Stopping Urine
*Don't Just Read*
*Share on your walls if you care about others*

When We Hold onto Relationships That Hurt Us




“Relationships are like glass. Sometimes it’s better to leave them broken than hurt yourself trying to put it back
together.” ~Unknown
Human beings are genetically programmed to desire love. Embraces are as important to us as food and water.
Perhaps that’s why when we find someone—the wrong someone—we’re often too blind to see it.
We feel it and yet we hide it away, write it off as an odd case of commitment phobia or just a hiccup in our new relationship, oblivious to the fact that were heading into a future of sleepless nights, constant worrying, and consistent phone checking.
Even when every hidden fiber within us tells us to walk away, we stay.
I recently experienced something similar. We first met back in high school, different people from completely different worlds. He was the guy that had all the friends; I
was shy and quiet.

Fast forward five years and we meet again. This time he’s in pre-law and I’m a writer trying to figure out her calling.
We meet for drinks, coffee, a movie here and there, and before you know it we’re walking hand in hand. I’ve met his friends, his parents, even his grandparents. To someone on the outside, this looks like something every
healthy couple would do, except we weren’t healthy—far from it.
He always had his phone, and yet my texts remained unanswered. He only wanted to hang out on occasional evenings, routinely made plans without following through on them, was never where he said he was, yet still referred to me as his girlfriend when we met someone he knew.
He was a guy that sucked at communicating, and I was the girl that needed it.
He was physical, I emotional. He wanted convenience; I wanted something that swept me off my feet.
It was a relationship doomed from the start; I was just too stubborn to see it.
I would find myself constantly asking for advice, yet always heard the same thing over and over. Get out of there. Leave. My excuses remained the same. He works all day. He’s busy. I just wasn’t ready to admit the truth to myself. Ignorance at its finest.
Even when I had the courage to bring up the things that bothered me, somehow he’d challenge all my worries.
“I’m just not a texter,” he’d say. “I prefer conversations face to face.” Of course, there’s nothing wrong with that response. It was the dishonesty I felt behind it.
I didn’t feel like I was in a relationship, yet he’d confirm that we were. He seemed to know exactly what to say to get me to stay.
I couldn’t see that I was the only one putting in the effort.
I made sure I was always there for him when he needed me, listened to him, even surprised him at work with coffee, putting myself out there, hoping that he would one day reciprocate.
He only talked about himself during our conversations, and when it came time for me to share, he seemed distant and uninterested in what came out of my mouth.
He was bound to a different city in the fall, and with his lack of communicating there was a deep nagging feeling that it was only a short time before I had my heart broken again.
I had wanted a relationship to work out so bad that I had chosen to ignore all the warning signs that this one wasn’t right.
Even when he left for a month and I suspected he’d cheat on me, I still stayed. Why? I could only draw one conclusion: I had been treated like that so many times before, I expected it. And I believed it was all I had to look forward to.
Though I tried to explain to myself that I deserved so much better, I wasn’t willing to hear it.
But one day I surprised myself. I became more independent. I began to pull away from him. His texts would go unanswered for hours; my obedience to go to him whenever he called began to wane.
I stopped initiating conversations and instead sat back and began to enjoy all the things I had ignored. I made a list of things I had always wanted to do and did them. It kept my mind off things and opened my eyes to the truth.
As the time passed, I would like to think, he became the one that needed me; he had just realized it too late.
I questioned whether or not he had treated me that way because he knew I would always be there for him; then,
when I no longer was, he wanted that same caring person back. Had I been nothing but a convenience for him the
entire time? I couldn’t wrap my head around it.
When it came time for me to explain, my answer was simple: My gut knew it wasn’t going to work from day one, but falling head over heels for him at first, I chose to ignore it.
I guess I just wanted so badly for things to work out I didn’t bother to think about how unhappy I was; I chose to mask all hurt with a small smile and laughter.
Life can be confusing and cruel sometimes, but a fantasy can’t hide the truth, no matter how badly you want it to.
No one deserves to be pushed to sidelines, to feel like second best. If there’s something telling you to stay away, if even the smallest of your radars begin to go off, walk away.
Leave knowing that you dodged a barrage of emotional bullets instead of realizing you had to fight to keep your
head afloat to keep from drowning.
If someone wants to be in your life, you shouldn’t have to change anything about yourself to keep them.
If they are willing to get to know you, they will. Period. All the wrong people may step into your life, and each one will no doubt leave their own emotional scars, but when the right one comes? You’ll know. You’ll feel it. I was lucky enough to have a best friend who stuck by me even when I chose to ignore all her warnings. When I finally realized my mistake, she simply smiled and asked if I wanted to watch the newest horror movie.
Friends like that are so important to have in your life. Coming from a hopeless romantic who prefers books and
writing to real people, this was hard to admit.
I can only say that when another man comes around I’ll be taking it slow.
For all the friends out there, even if you don’t agree, just be with them for every upsetting phone call and annoyed text.
Your non-judgmental support might just be the reason they realize they could have something better.
We all need to learn for ourselves in order to truly grow.
Even as much as we would like to save someone from the heartache they will no doubt experience, we need to take a step back, wait, and console them when they need it.
To the boys and or girls reading, realize what you have while you have it, because there’s nothing worse than finding out when it’s too late.

WHY I AM RELISHING MY NEW ROLE AT CHELSEA... VICTOR MOSES.

Victor Moses Professional footballer says he is “relishing”
playing as a wing-back for Chelsea this season after
struggling to hit the ground running since joining the Blues
in 2012.
Moses opened up on the club’s website on why he has
thrived as a wing-back despite having never played in that
role before and credits his outstanding performance to his
Italian manager at the club, Antonio Conte.
The 25-year-old has featured in eight Premier League
matches for Chelsea, including in their last three against
Hull City, Leicester City and Manchester United which they
have won without conceding.
The Nigeria international said he was only focused on
improving as a wing-back in Chelsea’s 3-4-3 formation.
“I have not played there before. I have just got to listen to
what the manager asks me to do in that position and the
way he wants me to do it.
“It’s very important to understand your teammates; so,
every game we played, I just want to keep on improving.
“The more games you play, the more experience you get in
that position and I’m really relishing and enjoying it at the
moment.
“I have got Azpilicueta there, the spare right-back, who is
behind me and he communicates with me and really helps
me out to make sure I am in the right position.
“It’s very good to link up with Pedro and Willian too. They
know when it’s time for me to go or when not to go.
“We speak to each other and we look at each other’s
movement to make sure we are doing the right thing on
the pitch,” Moses explained on the website.
He stated that the club’s performance in recent matches
was due to serious “work as a unit in training”. The former
Wigan Athletic player hopes they can “keep the momentum
going” in subsequent matches