In his Essence column, Nathan Hale Williams advises women that a bad relationship can be a blessing (if you keep it moving):
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One of the biggest obstacles to having a good dating life is trying to fit a square peg into a round hole. All too often, I see both women and men attempting to make a relationship work that is just not meant to be. Then many of my sister-friends get down and out when that relationship doesnโt work out. I think they should be thanking Mr. Wrong because he made room for Mr. Right.
Case in point, one my dear sister-friends was dating a guy in the fall 2011. A blind man could see that they werenโt right for each. Physically, the guy was extremely attractive, but his attributes stopped there. He was boring, not so bright and lacked a sense of humor. On the contrary, my sister-friend has an ebullient personality and is highly intelligent. Talking to her is like a sunny day while talking to him was like watching paint dry.
Following her inevitable break-up from, โMr. Hell No,โ she was sad for almost three weeks โฆ
Last week, she called and said those four words: โI found Mr. Right.โ The honeymoon had continued. And, after seeing them together, I believed her. Iโm exuberantly happy for her and I have a feeling itโs just going to get better. Theyโre already talking about marriage, which is a good sign from a guy. I always say, if a guy wants to marry you, he will talk about it rather quickly. That string of bad relationships that didnโt work out was a blessing to my sister-friend. Had she been stuck in those dead end relationships, the ending of which seemed catastrophic at the time, sheโd never had met her โM.R.โ
Read Nathan Hale Williams' entire piece at Essence.
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