Thomas G. Fiffer

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Thomas G. Fiffer

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November 2013


Thomas G. Fiffer holds a B.A. in English with honors from Yale University and an M.A. in English (Creative Writing) from The University of Illinois at Chicago, where he taught composition and English Literature. His authored articles for The Good Men Project have topped 10 million page views (over 20 million including pieces he’s edited), and he is a contributor to Weston Magazine and California Freemason. His popular blog, Tom Aplomb, offers readers more than 1,000 short, inspirational essays, written over six years on his daily morning commute from Westport to Manhattan, while he worked as an executive at a business information publishing company. Tom is also a professional book editor, publisher, and writing coach. He is the author of tw ...more

Average rating: 4.37 · 57 ratings · 6 reviews · 5 distinct works
Where the Light Is Brighter

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4.24 avg rating — 42 ratings5 editions
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Why It Can't Work: Detachin...

4.70 avg rating — 10 ratings — published 2015 — 3 editions
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Undiscovered Secrets

4.67 avg rating — 3 ratings — published 2011
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What Is Love?: A Guide for ...

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 2 ratings — published 2015
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The Alphabet of Love: A Pri...

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings2 editions
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Revolutions of Al...
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Quotes by Thomas G. Fiffer  (?)
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“Silence replaces conversation. Turning away replaces turning towards. Dismissiveness replaces receptivity. And contempt replaces respect. Emotional withholding is, I believe, the toughest tactic to deal with when trying to create and maintain a healthy relationship, because it plays on our deepest fears—rejection, unworthiness, shame and guilt, the worry that we’ve done something wrong or failed or worse, that there’s something wrong with us. ♦◊♦ But Sara’s description is more accurate and compelling than mine. Her line, “quietly sucks out your integrity and self-respect” is still stuck in my head three days later. It makes me think of those films where an alien creature hooks up a human to some ghastly, contorted machine and drains him of his life force drop by drop, or those horrible “can’t watch” scenes where witches swoop down and inhale the breath of children to activate their evil spells of world domination. In the movies, the person in peril always gets saved. The thieves are vanquished. The deadly transfusion halted. And the heroic victim recovers. But in real life, in real dysfunctional relationships, there’s often no savior and definitely no guarantee of a happy ending. Your integrity and self-respect can indeed be hoovered out, turning you into an emotional zombie, leaving you like one of the husks in the video game Mass Effect, unable to feel pain or joy, a mindless, quivering animal, a soulless puppet readily bent to the Reapers’ will. Emotional withholding is so painful because it is the absence of love, the absence of caring, compassion, communication, and connection. You’re locked in the meat freezer with the upside-down carcasses of cows and pigs, shivering, as your partner casually walks away from the giant steel door. You’re desperately lonely, even though the person who could comfort you by sharing even one kind word is right there, across from you at the dinner table, seated next to you at the movie, or in the same bed with you, back turned, deaf to your words, blind to your agony, and if you dare to reach out, scornful of your touch. When you speak, you might as well be talking to the wall, because you’re not going to get an answer, except maybe, if you’re lucky, a dismissive shrug.”
Thomas G. Fiffer, Why It Can't Work: Detaching from dysfunctional relationships to make room for true love

“Getting out is not giving up on someone when staying is giving up on yourself.”
Thomas G Fiffer, Why It Can't Work: Detaching From Dysfunctional Relationships to Make Room for True Love

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