For the last 10 days, I’ve been struggling to collect about a thousand dollars from a woman for my company. It shouldn’t be that big a deal, but she won’t communicate clearly with me about it.
I’d like to help her work out a solution for whatever’s going on — because I genuinely like her — but she dodges my phone calls and won’t call me back. Some days, she’ll text me a reply. She’ll promise something but when she doesn’t do that — let’s assume she really can’t — she doesn’t call me to explain. I have to pick bits and pieces out of her.
I’ve been left to wonder what’s really going on. How much of what she’s telling me is the truth? I don’t know. I can tell that she’s scared and freaking out about something she can’t control — and that fear and shame have led her to alienate me. And I’m the only one who can help her right now.
Maybe I’ve thought about this so clearly this week because I’ve been thinking about how people damage lots of their relationships by not being clear and honest about their thoughts and feelings. And it makes me realize that we destroy our personal relationships — romantic, friendship and otherwise — because we refuse to be direct and honest.

Who was this attractive woman? Why did her story not ring true?
How many warnings can life give us when something’s gone wrong?
The goals we chase can become chains that hold us in bondage
NOTEBOOK: The forest is burning, so quit arguing about single trees
What do U.S. colleges sell today? Knowledge or just access to jobs?
Obama administration wants to choose skin color of your neighbors
Like an alien, I move through a world I can see but never touch
What demons cause us to abandon one who offers what we need?