For most of my life, I was the real problem in each of my romantic relationships. Every failure was ultimately mine.
I didn’t know that at the time, of course. If you had suggested it to me back then, I would have been aggressively defensive. I would have gotten angry. I could have explained clearly and reasonably why I was always blameless.
It wasn’t until I had gone through a lot of therapy — in bits and pieces, over a decade or so — that I finally came face to face with the demons that had stalked my life and shaped my actions.
I hadn’t been a bad person. I hadn’t been abusive in relationships. But the emotional demons within caused me to sabotage my relationships with poor decisions. And those demons gave me every excuse in the world to blame others.
I still live with those demons today. They still influence my thinking. They tell me I’ll never be good enough. They tell me that nobody will ever really love me. They tell me that I’m worthless unless I’m perfect. I now know these are lies, even though I have to keep learning that over and over.
What I’ve come to understand lately is that I need a woman who’s confronted her demons, too. That doesn’t mean I want a “perfect” partner. In fact, I’m not attracted to women who aren’t damaged in their own ways.
But I need a partner who’s already confronted her demons. I need a woman who’s already started to deal with those demons, not living in complete denial — as I did for so many years.

Leave your dead past behind; that’s not where you’re going
I’d be thrilled if Ron Paul were elected, but I won’t vote for him
If our assumptions don’t match, we can clash with best intentions
Intelligent, well-meaning people often pull in opposite directions
Living a sane and healthy life is now radical by world’s standards
Wishful thinking: Why Ron Paul can’t (and won’t) be elected president
Real-life ‘ghost story’: The tale of a house that didn’t want me there
Replacing Obama with a Republican president won’t change anything