TELL ME ABOUT IT: Push for details a deal-breaker

— DEAR CAROLYN: My boyfriend wanted to have the Numbers Conversation. I already know what you think about this generally. I was perfectly comfortable trading our numbers, but he has pushed the issue further, wanting to know more about the specific circumstances of each person on the list.

I was raped about a year ago. I've been counseled and have recovered healthily from the trauma, but I worry that revealing this to him will change the way he treats me. If I hadn't already told him the number (which is single-digit, so I know he'll remember), I would be fine with just omitting this detail for now, but I don't want to lie. What do you suggest?

- Wrinkles in the Numbers Thingy

DEAR READER: I often get letters from people who have been sexually assaulted, every one of them representing a unique, private pain. For every such victim, there is, of course, an assailant, someone who felt comfortable objectifying another human being - inflicting that pain in service of his own interests. Clearly disturbing.

Even more disturbing, though, is a recurring theme in letters from people recovering, even "healthily," from assault: Many are now in relationships with someone who is objectifying them all over again. More subtly this time, maybe, but no less destructively.

I am not a professional counselor, as yours presumably was. I'm working from two paragraphs of your life.

But I know objectification when I see it. Your boyfriend is more concerned about mining your sexual details than he is about you as a whole. Otherwise he wouldn't be digging for such private, useless dirt.

He wouldn't be pushing, either; he'd not only respect your resistance, but you'd also resist less. In fact, if you and he had a trusting relationship, you'd both be giving up half of this stuff on your own in the course of routine conversation.

And, you wouldn't be worried about his treating you differently. Give yourself some credit here - you know full well he wants this information so he can judge your value to him. That's why you're afraid he's going to value you less. This alone is a deal-breaker.

A "healthy" new relationshipmeans being equally attentive to his being good enough for you, as you are to your being good enough for him. When you withhold a part of yourself for fear of scaring someone away, it means this crucial balance is off.

You, and he, and whoever else defends this dehumanizing practice of sexual beancounting, might well be thinking, maybe he's been as open with her, maybe he isn't in this to judge her, maybe he's responding to the defenses she's putting up.

Wrongheaded, but also easy to prove or disprove, when you're ready for it emotionally: If he has demonstrated a kind heart - i.e., if he deserves you - then tell him your truth. Let him show you he won't live down to your worst fears. But know, please, that if he doesjudge you harshly, it's an ugly gift, but still a gift - a get-outof-hell-free card. Just be sure you use it.

By the way, I would argue this should change the way he treats you. You responded toa trauma by getting help and working to get well. Both of you need to treat you with a lot more respect.

Chat online with Carolyn at 11 a.m. Central time each Friday at

www.washingtonpost.com

. Write to Tell Me About It in care of The Washington Post, Style Plus, 1150 15th St. N.W., Washington, D.C. 20071; or e-mail

tellme@washpost.com

Style, Pages 64 on 05/18/2008

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