Why Does She Still Want To Leave?

20.05.26 08:08 PM - By David Ronald Sylvester

Breaking Free from the Pride Trap

You’ve been doing everything right in your relationship. You’ve been a good husband, a caring partner, working hard to provide. Yet, your partner still wants space, or worse, she wants to leave.

This disconnect between your perception of the relationship and her current reality can feel utterly baffling... and deeply unfair. It leaves you questioning your value, or even her character.


I’m David. I’ve faced this exact paradox in my own marriage. We were on the brink of divorce, living in different places, but I learned how to rebuild the connection between us. Since then, I’ve coached many others through the same struggles. I understand how frustrating it is when your good intentions seem to count for nothing.


In this post, I’ll explain why your current views might be blinding you, and how you can move beyond this feeling of disconnect. We’ll cover 7 key steps to genuinely understand her world and inspire her to consider coming back into yours...


The Pride Trap: How Your Good Intentions Can Blind You

When you believe you’re doing everything right, you can become trapped on what I call the "Pride Mountaintop."

There's an old Tibetan about it, "A person who holds themself above others... is like someone sitting on a mountaintop: it is cold there, it is hard, and nothing will grow." It goes on, but that's the first part we're talking about here - it feels GOOD to be "right," but, it's a lonely and unproductive place for a relationship...


This isn't necessarily conscious arrogance. Nobody sets out in the morning thinking "I'm going to win at being right about everything today."


No. It’s just a subtle form of confirmation bias – with confirmation bias being that tendency we all have: to seek out and interpret information in a way that confirms our existing beliefs.

If you believe you’re a good partner, you’ll unconsciously stack evidence to support that, making you blind to your partner’s reality. Especially where her feelings about you contradict that notion...


This "pride deceiver" prevents true understanding from ever being found. It leads us to subconsciously, then consciously start to question her character, her motivations, and her sanity, to question EVERYTHING, rather than considering our own contributions or the complex context she's navigating.


At the same time, we neglect to see her reasons, her struggles, and how our actions (or inactions) might have contributed to her feelings of hopelessness. Uh oh...


Step Off the Mountaintop: Cultivating Humility for Real Connection

To genuinely reconnect, you must move from that cold, isolated mountaintop to a "fertile field" of humility, ready to learn and adapt.


This means recognizing that perfection is the enemy of progress. Instead of striving to be perfect, focus on perfecting your steps one at a time.

Nobody cares if you're already perfect; they care about your trajectory – whether you're learning, growing, and changing.


This humility is rooted in the Hero Mindset: taking 100% responsibility for your 50% of the problem. This isn't about accepting all blame; it's about focusing solely on what you can control: your actions, your thoughts, and your beliefs.


Where you focus, your power flows.

If you focus on her actions or external circumstances, your power flows out.

If you focus on yourself, your power flows in, enabling you to make real changes.


We must shift from defensiveness to fearlessness in seeking understanding.

This isn't about winning arguments; it's about proactively being curious about her perspective, her feelings, and her thoughts. It's about valuing connection over being right.

By planning for genuine dialogue, rather than sweeping issues under the rug, you set the stage for true reconciliation.


Your Tool To Cut Through Differences: Wielding the 'Explore' Skill

As you navigate this journey, you'll inevitably encounter "the ordeal" - a stage where you're facing even more uncomfortable truths and deeply entrenched assumptions, fueled by both your and her confirmation biases over the years.

The Explore skill is your weapon here, a communication tool designed to unearth differences with curiosity, not judgment.


The Explore skill allows you to gently bring up your thoughts and address confusing words or behaviors, without making anyone feel attacked. It fosters discovery and understanding by making your thoughts into suggestions, rather than accusations.


Here's how to use the Explore skill, and an acronym you can remember it with - J.A.C.:

  1. Justification: Briefly share your current hypothesis or viewpoint, stating what you were thinking about a situation. Introduce it with phrases like, "You might see this differently, but when I look at X, Y, and Z, I was kind of thinking..."
  2. Antithesis: Openly acknowledge that your perspective might be wrong or incomplete. Admit your hypothesis could have many opposing views. Phrases to use could include, "But I realize that what I think I know could be totally impossible from your side," or "I could be completely wrong, and you may have a different perspective I've never thought of..."
  3. Check/Clarify: Invite your partner to share their thoughts, clarify their understanding, or add what you might be missing. This is where we end the Explore and pass her the mic, by asking questions like, "What do you think?" or "Can you tell me more about your side?"


Building Unwavering Trust: Faith in the Journey

To sustain this challenging journey, you need to cultivate faith in yourself, in her, and in the journey itself. This isn't blind hope, but a deep conviction in the inherent goodness and potential within everyone. And why? 


Because faith is the perfect counter for pride.

If Pride prevents understanding, Faith is the catalyst that allows it to form.


What does faith mean? It means approaching her actions not as character flaws, but as expressions born from her unique context and experiences. It’s hard to be angry at someone when you get them. It's hard to blame someone when you understand why they did what they did.

Faith in her, that she must have reasons that make sense to her, disarms blame and re-opens the door to deep connection.


Finally, we want to embody the Ally Identity.

An ally puts aside their ego and the need to be right, focusing instead on communication skills to build safety.

They are not perfect, but focused on perfecting things one day at a time.

They are fearless in campaigning on difficult topics, bringing calm and hope when others are tense.

This hero identity will radiate strength, understanding, and support, allowing her confirmation bias to melt away, and inspiring trust.


Conclusion: We Want to Become the Hero of Our Own Story

If you're grappling with misunderstanding a partner who's pulling away, remember these steps.

By stepping off the mountaintop of pride, cultivating humility, wielding skills like the Explore, embracing the ordeal, and building faith, you transform into an Ally she can trust.


This isn't about just changing her mind. It's about fundamentally changing who you are. You build a life and a self that you can be truly proud of, regardless of whatever her choices are. That way, you'll build more safety and reattraction in one five minute conversation than a million winning arguments ever could...


If you found value here, hit subscribe for more insights on saving your relationship. And remember, the path may be challenging, but each step forward is a big win. Just keep walking, and become the hero of your own story.


David Sylvester

PS - hopefully what I’ve said here helps. If you follow everything in these blogs and vids, and put it into practice, you’ll be on your way.
Once you see some positive signs, that’s where most people realise: it’s challenging to do it alone...

If you find yourself there, I want to encourage you to take the first real step, and watch our First Step Video. 

It's 46 minutes, where I explain how we help guys in your exact situation.

I'll also explain the Three Pillars - understanding these will be a huge step towards saving your marriage.

Set aside a lunchbreak, or find a quiet corner, and give it your full attention... because this is where you start to turn things around.

Link is below.

David Ronald Sylvester