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1. DON'T play games.
This applies to both the men and women around you. Men don't play games; what you see is what you get. Maybe it's because they're not as sophisticated, or maybe they just can't be bothered to learn the rules of these games we play. Mostly, they don't like to have to read our minds.
(Admittedly, there are men who do play games with women, and the short answer to dealing with that is the same: Don't play. Refuse to play the game, and set up firm healthy boundaries.)
Women don't like women who play games, and believe me, women know when another woman is being manipulative. Even if we are gullible and fall into another woman's cleverly-laid trap, you can bet your crocodile Ferragamo ballet flats that it will be the first and last time.
That said, I do understand that sometimes a man is to blame for a woman's behavior. All one needs is to be in a destructive relationship where one partner dominates and manipulates the relationship, and all kinds of nasty habits get formed.
Women in these relationships learn to be manipulative and over time develop co-dependent behaviors. These have to be unlearned if this mindset is to be prevented from rolling over and repeating itself in future relationships.
DO be honest.
I learned to play games, the result of having dated one person too many.
For instance, I would create 'impossible' situations which required my partner to give up appointments for, or which caused him no small amount of sacrifice. How he reacted would help me gauge his feelings for me. Of course, playing the damsel-in-distress always seemed to work also. This because some men like to view themselves as a 'rescuer' and this role does positive things for their ego.
More often, I would say things that would get get me the response I wanted. It could be anything that would arouse his sympathies, his concern, anything to get his attention. One day I could be 'overwhelmed,' on another, I could be 'confused,' in need of some 'rescuing.'
Then when I met the man who became my husband, I realized he didn't play any games with me (except tennis, and boy, was that a washout) because he had truckloads of self-confidence. That, and the fact that he carried little emotional baggage helped give a sense of freedom and space in our relationship, even today.
Learn to be honest. First, with yourself, and the rest will follow.
It took me a long time to accept who I was, but when I did, I didn't make excuses for my behaviors or my bad decisions. I moved on.
Honesty is an under-rated virtue and in short supply these days. So when women behave honestly and with no hidden agendas, men appreciate that and attribute that to a woman's self-confidence and her healthy sense of self-esteem.
It makes for healthy friendships, both with men and with women.
Next: Games Women Play (Part Two): Checking Out the Competition


