This article shows you how to identify and deal with bailers as well as recognizing what their behavior truly represents and why you may be susceptible to them.
Has this ever happened to you? Perhaps it took a different form. A promise to help out with something, such as moving, running a bake sale or cleaning out a garage followed by a last-minute withdrawal? Or maybe it was an invitation to play tennis, go to the movies or go shopping which never actually transpired? Most of us have encountered this and many times, the reasons why things don’t end up happening turn out to be fairly innocuous, everyday things. But if any of these has happened to you repeatedly with the same person at the heart of the matter, then you may be in the hands of that master or mistress of manipulation: the bailer.
Bailers vary across the board with lots of different reasons driving their behavior but the important part for you to focus on in dealing with one is this: they don’t respect you or your time. If that statement puts you on the defensive, I’m not surprised. Many of us make excuses for bailers because they employ such beguiling tools and tactics. We are drawn in by their charm, their sense of self-deprecation, their business and so on. They are playing on our low self-esteem and our low self-worth. After all, what does it say about how little you think of yourself, if their excuse always seem better than you? Why are you not worth the time and effort?Once you realize and accept that you are important and worthy and fabulous and all of those things, it’s so much easier to see the bailer for what he/she is—an energy drainer who is taking up your time, effort and emotions. It also becomes much easier to set boundaries regarding your terms for acceptable behavior. For example, it might look like this: “The next time we are scheduled to have lunch, I won’t wait more than 10 minutes for you. Period. If you don’t show or make excuses, I won’t be inviting you again. If you invite me and I accept and you still don’t show, I won’t be going out anywhere with you ever again.
”If after all that, you still hold onto a bailer, then understand that you are choosing to tolerate their behavior. No complaints about being stood up since you put yourself in that position. No temper tantrums when they pull out of a commitment at the last minute. It’s their nature and you accepted them. Personally, I’d rather spend my time with people who value and respect me and my time and who stand by their commitments. For me, life is too full and I no longer have any patience with bailers.
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