When You Know It's Over: Why Men Stay Too Long — and How to Leave Without Destroying Everything - Softcover

Dylewski, Philippe

 
9798195404468: When You Know It's Over: Why Men Stay Too Long — and How to Leave Without Destroying Everything

Synopsis

When You Know It's Over
Why Men Stay Too Long — and How to Leave Without Destroying Everything

You already know.

Not officially. Not yet. But somewhere between the coffee made out of reflex every morning and the nights when you don't really sleep anymore, you know.

This book is not for men looking for a reason to leave. They already have one. It's for those who dream of somewhere else and are still here.

Why do men stay in dead marriages? For the children, they say. For financial reasons, sometimes. Out of generosity. These reasons are real. They are also, for the most part, presentable ways of not naming what is actually happening.

When You Know It's Over introduces four men you will recognize — perhaps in others, perhaps in yourself.

The Procrastinator knows exactly what he wants to do. He's just waiting for the right moment. The right moment never comes, which is convenient.

The Saboteur doesn't leave. He makes himself unbearable until she's the one who leaves. That way, it's not his fault.

The Martyr Accountant stays out of generosity, he says. He tallies every sacrifice with the precision of a Swiss accountant. He suffers visibly. He hopes someone notices.

The Permission Ghost won't leave until another woman gives him permission. Sometimes he gets it. Often he's still waiting.

Drawing on thirty years of research in social, behavioral, and clinical psychology, the first half of this book examines the mechanisms that keep men in situations they have already left internally. Gottman on emotional withdrawal. Kahneman on loss aversion. Baumeister on the decisions we refuse to make. The research says what it says — and it is rarely flattering.

Then the book does what most never do: it turns to the leaving itself.

Not the fantasy of leaving — the mechanics. The conversation you've rehearsed a hundred times and never had. The pleading that will come, and how to hold without cruelty. The children, not as an excuse this time but as a practical reality to be handled well. The money, the house, the dog. The first months alone, which are harder and shorter than you fear. And the thing nobody warns you about: that she will, in fact, be fine — and that this truth is what finally sets you free instead of guilty.

No therapy. No tribunal. No verdict on who was right. Just a clear-eyed look at why you stayed, and a steady hand for the part where you stop.

You already knew that too. This book simply stops letting you pretend you didn't.

The author — Philippe Dylewski is a psychologist with thirty years of work across social, behavioral, and clinical psychology. He writes without flattery and without judgment, which on this subject is rarer than it should be.

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