"I gave him everything and he still didn't love me," is a story I've heard over and over again from women. I know exactly what they mean. I've certainly felt that way myself.
"I would give her anything she wants, but it just doesn't seem to do any good. She takes my presents, thanks me, tells me I'm a nice guy, but she doesn't love me." It's a story I've heard over and over again from men. He gives, gives, gives. She takes, takes, takes. And the other guy gets the girl.
At first, doing too much seems natural and even somewhat pleasurable. After all, when you're in love aren't you supposed to do lots for your loved one, and enjoy it? Aren't you supposed to give your all?
No. Not until your relationship reaches a certain point. Before that point, you will suffocate love just as it's starting to bloom, instead of allowing it to blossom naturally.
Giving too much too soon is by far the biggest relationship mistake made by both men and women. I will explain why it suffocates love, how love blossoms naturally, how to know when you're giving too much and what to do about it, and when it's OK to give your all. But first, let's start with the different ways of over-giving:
Beth and Tony fell in love instantly. They were inseparable
after one date. He bought flowers; she cooked dinners every night. He read
love poems out loud to her. She always put love notes in his jacket pocket
when he went to work.
Then one time he forgot the flowers. Beth was crushed. Then she
forgot the note. Tony felt unloved. Resentment intruded into perfect love,
and their relationship never recovered.
One man told me, "The minute a woman starts giving me valuable things,
I feel pressured. She looks like a needy woman who's trying to buy love.
When a woman gives me something expensive, it makes me feel as if an alien
element has come into the relationship -- the element of dollar value as
opposed to love and caring. I also feel forced to keep up in some way."
Also, no man wants to live the rest of his life with a spendthrift.
Giving him an expensive gift (even for his birthday or Christmas) will
just make him worry about how you'll spend money if the two of you get
married.
In the extreme (see my "Did For Love" case), doing too much can change who you are until the person he or she was attracted to in the first place is gone.
The worst part about giving too much is that the other person probably won't just drop you. At least then you'd be free to start over. Instead, they will keep you on a string and not take you seriously, and you find yourself in "crazy love" relationship.
If you've just slipped and said, "I love you" too soon, or you're a guy who's given a gift too soon, or a woman who's blurted out, "When are you going to call again?" by mistake, the relationship can be re-balanced with a little mid-course correction.
Again, think of the over-watered plant. All you can do is hold off on watering and hope. If you've started to smother the relationship, all you can do is step back and let it breathe.
Don't call. If you can, take a trip and send him or her just ONE
postcard. If you can't leave, just throw yourself into your work for a
couple of weeks. It won't hurt.