How To Make
Your Ex Miss You Enough To
Want You Back
Trying to make
an ex jealous in an attempt to gain deeper
affection is a common playing hard-to-get
tactic advocated by some “experts” and
practiced by many.
I know many men and women who’ve used this
tactic and it’s worked in the short term,
and many more who have used it and it back
fired big time. Here is why?
1. First of all, it’s counter productive to
want or even try to hurt someone who you
love. What you’re doing by making him/her
see you with someone else is trying to make
him/her feel insecure and unvalued. And most
men and women are already insecure and
lacking in self-worth without you even
trying. All this does is make them withdraw
even further into themselves or find someone
else who makes them feel better about
themselves. Those who are secure and have a
strong sense of self-worth usually don’t
want second-hand stuff, used merchandize or
leftovers. They’ll be too proud to take you
back.
2. Secondly, the flow of attention and
affection which should be directed towards
making someone feel affection and desire is
disturbed by such a maneuver. Dividing your
affection and directing your attention
towards more than one person makes you
unable to give enough to one or the other,
nor take enough from either. You often end
up alone.
3. Thirdly, a persistent man or woman will
no doubt fight his or her battle for your
affection and attention and will overcome
his or her real or supposed rival. But after
winning the battle, the flow of his or her
affection and desire will be weakened and he
or she will be exhausted by the battle to
beat a rival. Most relationships get
strained, sometimes so strained that either
party knows at any moment the thread holding
the relationship together can break or wear
through.
There is another more powerful and effective
way to make someone miss you so much that
they want you back.
We all seem to come equipped with a
nostalgia gene: especially when we remember
positive emotional experiences. When we look
back on these experiences, something inside
of us feels a sense of loss - whether it is
a relationship with a parent, the homeland
you left behind or the childhood friends
you’ve lost contact with. Usually we tend to
remember these emotionally positive
experiences more clearly, warmly and
longingly. We know that we may never get to
experience them again, but part of us wishes
we could. And we smile just thinking of the
possibility.
In my culture we have rituals -- more like
group therapy -- where a whole village or
family sits down and (loosely translated)
“sings themselves back to existence". Most
families, clans and villages have "songs"
that are meant to create a sense of shared
identity. By singing these songs, the group
invokes that feeling of togetherness or
oneness. The ritual is used mostly in times
of crisis or when one member feels/acts in
ways that threaten that sense of shared
identity. The goals is not to get stuck in
the past but to move forward --together.
People usually tend to value their
relationships -- and shared experiences --
even more.
In my family, being so far away from home,
we use this ritual to reaffirm "who we are,
where we came from and why we're where we're
are". No matter how many times we do it, we
end up crying together, laughing together,
hugging and sometimes just fall asleep
wherever we are -- together. We often feel
stronger, revitalized and determined to
achieve our goals -- together.
Using the basics of this ritual and some of
my training in Experimental Existential
Psychology, I’ve been teaching my clients
(couples and singles) how to use the
“singing yourselves back to existence"
ritual as away of making someone miss them
so much that they want them back.
If you are still friends with your ex and
you talk with him/her on a regular basis,
you can make him/her miss you enough to want
you back by “singing yourselves back to
existence".
1. Bring up really wonderful feelings and
experiences that happened in the past when
you were together. Talk about fun times, the
emotional moments, and the
silly/embarrassing incidences that made both
of you laugh/cry together and feel closer to
each other.
2. Ask him/her if he/she remembers --
television shows, songs, food, events and
remembered images and encounters, what
he/she remembers and why he/she remembers
them. This will gently pull him/her back
into that state of mind that unites the
realities of the present and past, the
longing between yesterday and tomorrow.
Pieces of the everyday create the sense of
unity. Little trivial things make the
strongest bonds.
3. Talk about your times together not with
regret or giving the impression of wanting
to go back in the past but with the goal of
making him/her feel that those were the best
times of your life. The real secret is not
in looking back to what it was nor forward
to what might have been but living in the
present relationship and accepting it as it
is now. When the only continuity possible in
life is NOW, there is in the NOW fluidity,
freedom, active engagement, growth and the
sense of being “unburdened" or put in a
modern hip way -- no stress.
4. Use ‘we" instead of “I’ or “you". Your
goal should be to redefine the meaning of
“we" and why it is much better than “you"
and “I". Don’t’ idealize it -- no falsity,
no pretence, no disillusionment just
appreciation.
The ultimate task, the final test and proof,
the work for which all other work depends on
is merely preparation. It does not work to
say, "Let's be nostalgic for a moment" and
expect the two of you to suddenly fall into
that wonderful state of mind. To share
nostalgia, you need a time that is ripe for
unfolding your hearts and memories. It
doesn’t work if the other person is
preoccupied reading today's newspapers, busy
talking on the phone or trying to wiggle
him/herself out of the conversation.
My people have a saying “you can not have a
face if you don’t have the back of the
head." You can not undo the past but you can
use the past to bring the future into
existence. Just ask a couple who've been
together a very long time how they did IT
and they'll tell you "WE'VE BEEN THROUGH
MANY THINGS -- GOOD AND BAD -- BUT THROUGH
IT ALL WE STUCK TOGETHER."
Make it work for you, too!
