Anachron wrote:
FishFish wrote:
I figured this would be something that would be solved with time, by me staying by his side, and showing him he's the person I want to be with.
This is probably your best path.
It will take much time and love.
Why does it bother you? Let him be. Are you trying to turn him into some image in your head that he should be? Trying to fix him will not help. It will make his confidence issues worse. Like telling him he is broken. Can you see what I mean here?
Instead, perhaps try to only support his strengths (sincerely without exaggeration). You can bring out his best parts if you stop looking at the "flaws".
Would it not bother you to hear someone you love say unkind things about themselves all the time like they are not worthy of your company or your love? If I really cared for someone it would hurt me to hear them speak of themselves that way, because words like that come from a place of pain and low self-esteem and I would feel bad if the person I loved felt that way all the time. I don't want someone I love to be hurting like that. She is not the one telling him he is broken,
he is the one telling her that over and over again, after two years of her telling him she loves him and all the reasons why she loves him and thinks he is wonderful and right for her. If after all that he is still so low and doubtful of his worth to her it speaks to chronically low self-esteem that needs clinical help (talk therapy is usually best for such things) to clear up. Why live your life hating yourself and thinking the people in your life are better off without you, if you can learn to love yourself and feel like you contribute positively to the lives of the people who love you and that they are glad to have you around?