Grand Theft Autocrat
I'm a 29-year-old straight woman, and I recently started dating this guy I really like. The only issue is he seems a bit controlling. For example, he always wants to pick the restaurant and which TV show we watch. While I'm generally pretty go with the flow, it seems like I never choose what we're doing. It's one thing to pick the restaurant, but I worry that he might be like this with bigger things (like if we got a place together or got married). Should I be worried?
--Unsure
It's important to have a boyfriend who shows interest in your point of view, ideally beyond, "Are your arm restraints a little tight?"
But before we start measuring you for your "Handmaid's Tale" bonnet, consider whether there's a non-creepy, non-control freakish reason the guy wants to choose the dining establishment and the entertainment. Is he some extreme foodie who pores over restaurant reviews and follows chefs like other guys follow baseball players, while you're simply a chick who likes to eat out?
By the way, I've personally horrified some waitresses who've overheard me asking my boyfriend to tell me what I should order. I do this not because I am some shell of a person and have no opinions but because I got tired of having food envy when our dinners came. I realized my boyfriend is some sort of culinary sniffer dog, using mere words on a menu to divine the tastiest, most exciting entree, much like tracking dogs use an old sweatshirt to sniff their way to a buried dead body.
However, save for the few areas one's partner has special expertise, there are things in a relationship that can be outsourced, and your decision-making should not be one of them. You create who you are through your choices, and if you make no choices, there's no "you."
The elimination by a partner of the need for you to have an opinion could be the beginnings of "coercive control." This is a term by sociologist Evan Stark for an insidious form of subjugation in a relationship that an abuser uses to dominate and control their partner. It's a gradual psychological hostage-taking, breaking down a person's independent self, their concept of reality, and their ability to make decisions for themselves.
Victims of coercive control suffer "perspecticide," which Stark describes as a loss of the ability to "know what you know." This comes through their gradual isolation from friends and family and losing touch with their opinions, desires, and values, including their ability to discern what is right and wrong. Their abuser (who research finds can be male or female) often resorts to intimate partner violence when coercive control of their victim fails, like if he or she shows a flash of independent thought.
In a healthy relationship, a person does not get erased, their perspective never taken into account. Healthy relationships are interdependent. Though one partner might not agree with the other's every belief and idea, they generally respect each other's thinking and are open to their suggestions. Marriage researcher John Gottman describes this as partners accepting each other's "influence."
This mutual influencing seems to make for more satisfying romantic partnerships with more staying power, explains Gottman: "Men who allow their wives to influence them have happier marriages and are less likely to divorce than men who resist their wives' influence. Statistically speaking, when a man is not willing to share power with his partner, there is an 81 percent chance his marriage will self-destruct."
Women tend to be higher in a "pleaser" personality trait, "agreeableness," which, on a positive note, manifests in being warm, kind, generous, and motivated to have positive interactions with others. On a darker note, it can make a woman with a dominant partner more likely to do as she's told. That said, your feelings are not the boss of you, and you can simply decide to override them and assert yourself: Have opinions, make decisions, and stand up for yourself.
Accordingly, your interactions with this man should be driven by the understanding that you are his equal in the relationship, not his subordinate. To see whether he's up for an equal partnership -- a girlfriend rather than a female serf -- tell him you don't think it's healthy for you or the relationship for him to make all the decisions. Going forward, you want shared responsibility for decision-making. For your part in this, you need to take responsibility: Assert yourself by asserting your opinions and desires when there are decisions to be made. This is how you create a healthy relationship instead of a two-person totalitarian state -- complete with a "Gulag Sweet Home" needlepoint and where mundane questions like, "How was your day?" kick off your Soviet show trial.
For pages and pages of "science-help" from me, buy my latest book, "Unf*ckology: A Field Guide to Living with Guts and Confidence." It lays out the PROCESS of transforming to live w/confidence.








I married this man. Don’t expect things to change. At first, I thought there were good reasons. He was working two full-time jobs and going to school full time too. He explained that his time was limited, but since I was just working one part time job and one full time job, I could do things that I wanted to do when he was busy. I needed to spend the night with him so he could see me as he fell asleep and woke up. Of course he didn’t have time to actually visit. Somehow, he is still working more than one job and studying 36 years later.
He picked the restaurants for this reason or that reason but I noticed that they usually didn’t have any healthy choices. When I tried to order fish, he would get upset, explaining that they always had to make it fresh and it took too long. When I brought home vegetables for myself, his mother explained that I should never eat those in front of him. He didn’t like vegetables and smelling them or watching me eat them made him sick, so he not only chose the restaurants but he made sure that they had a limited range and didn’t offer exotic foods or spices.
I let myself get so entrenched, and weak I suppose, by the time I figured him out that I just can’t leave. I’m not close to friends or family anymore and it’s been so long since I have done what I enjoy that I’m not even sure what I would enjoy anymore.
While in quarantine I started watching television again. I had stopped for years because he would come in and flip the channel, often leaving the room right afterwards, and it didn’t seem worth the fight, so I just transferred my attention to my phone.
My husband’s family melds into one another and all love exactly the same foods, restaurants, and television shows. One time his mother said I could watch television but when I turned on my favorite HGTV show, she got upset and told me that they don’t believe in those kind of shows. She has also told me that they couldn’t enjoy a restaurant because they didn’t serve the right sides with a dish. Evidently certain meats can only be eaten with two specific sides. At least now I know where he gets his ideas, but they seem whackadoodle to me.
Jen at December 29, 2020 6:28 AM
Jen, if you need someone to talk to, I'll listen. I'm sorry you're in that relationship
Mary at December 29, 2020 12:10 PM
Jen, RUN for the hills!! There are worse things than living alone! Life's too short to stay living in this prison you're in.
Jan at December 30, 2020 2:24 AM
Jen, please don’t accept this life. I read you as still being fairly young and you can still discover your actual self. I would never suggest divorce, bc it’s a difficult thing to do after many years of marriage, but you can start making small changes to please yourself and your situation. Please don’t give up.
Sheep Mom at December 31, 2020 5:44 PM
Is "Taken In Hand" still a thing?
Richard Aubrey at January 2, 2021 1:47 PM
@Jen,
Time to secretly start collecting evidence for the divorce. Seriously, that kind of man is a no-no.
Sixclaws at January 5, 2021 2:39 PM
TV and restaurants are the most important things in life. If someone expresses an opinion different from mine, I now now "he" is coercive,domineering and emotionally immature. No wonder the population is crashing.
Rocky at March 25, 2021 6:47 PM
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