Interesting idea. In my thinking, honesty and privacy aren't mutually exclusive. Being honest doesn't mean sacrificing your sense of self. If part of your honesty from the outset is that you have a need to maintain private space in your life, that's a fair shake. That's the only way I feel my relationship with my wife has succeeded where every other one before failed. She not only understands and respects this boundary...she has a similar nature of her own.
So while we do not lie to one another, there are aspects of both our lives to which the other is not privy.
The better question for you to ask is how much privacy YOU need in a relationship.
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You worry about individuality in a relationship where there is total honesty? That's hard for me to understand. It's not like you are being asked to sacrifice who you are. You are being asked to share that person. There's a big difference. Now, if you are being asked to share yourself, but the intention is to find out who you really are so you can be molded into someone else that's a separate issue. And if who you are is someone who doesn't really want to have only one sexual partner for life, and she wants to make you into a person who does want that, then the real issue isn't one of insufficient privacy, or even one person trying to change the other. The problem is you don't want the same relationship. This is an incompatibility which is unfixable unless one of you yields completely.
It's something that should come up in the beginning, before either of you becomes involved too deeply. This is one of many things I get settled while I'm still deciding how much I like a man. ...
I agree with this completely. For me it's not just privacy, but the need and willingness to have and let your partner have a life separate from your relationship. I don't want or ask my husband to share evert interest, every thought, and every aspect of his psyche, and I don't want it. I require the same.
I also agree that honesty and privacy are not mutually exclusive. Doing something that I've discussed or gleaned from my husband that he would see as betrayal is dishonest. Omitting to tell him things that have a direct effect on him or our relationship is dishonest. Making things up when asked questions is dishonest. Wanting to keep some thoughts and experiences private is different. ...
I love the discussion of honesty, privacy, and how the concepts challenge a person's sense of self. Like snoozan, I think that subsuming your self totally within a relationship is not the best choice and that it may be unhealthy--everyone should have a strong sense of self, IMO.
It sounds to me that what you are talking about when they say they are afraid of honesty is really a fear of being
transparent (not honest) in your close relationships. Transparency goes beyond honesty and requires a great deal of trust. To me, being a close to someone and trusting them means keeping my integrity while becoming more and more transparent to them.
Where I have come to (I think) is that I must live with a principled center. Principles are unwavering and, therefore, the compass always points North. My goal is to live with integrity and transparency. Read if you will: honesty-- and it is more than that.
Integrity is the value I place on myself--that I say what I mean, follow through, practice what I preach, and that I am me all the time--good, bad, or indifferent. Integrity is owning your words, actions, and truth--making them one with your inner energy.
Transparency lives on the far side of honesty. It goes beyond honesty in that instead of
choosing which things to share and be honest about, you
allow others to see your truth at all times without careful selection of topics and subject matter. It's SO hard to do this. And I feel that it is crucial to work towards this within the confines of a close relationship.
And (not "but," as "but" negates all that comes before it) I know in my heart that what I try to achieve is good. It is good for me (and my trust issues) to push through and past honesty to transparency. It is good for others to interact without feeling "protected" from my truth (as weird and uncomfortable as that feels to us both/all). Who am I to think I can or should protect them, anyway?
And, as such, I must realize that there will be times when I am judged, marginalized, and compartmentalized by others who feel this truth and, perhaps, are unprepared for it. I realize that their marginalization, compartmentalization and judgment of me is a more primitive reactionary protection that we all do when faced with the things (truths) whose presence transcends our limits in new and unnerving ways.
I realize that while my natural instinct in those moments is to refrain, to hold back, to second guess--that my compass points North. And that as I walk this very challenging path, I reflect on what my greatgrandmother always said to me as a boy: "The long way home is the best way."
I've rambled, but I hope this helps in some way.