I finished this a while back in my "He's Just Not That Into You", "Why Men Date Bitches" phase of my reading mood. Every once in a while, I'll pull out a random relationship book, not so much because I wanna tailor myself for the partner I'm with, or to assess if he's worth keeping, but rather to attain a little more focus on myself. See, I'm the nice girl who falls into the naive trap of being supportive, helpful, and hardworking, who (I'm embarrassed to admit) has allowed myself to be used and taken for granted more often than I should have. But growing up I assumed the belief that if you were hard working and good to the people around you, you'd get it back in spades. Yeah, right in the back. I've found since if you are too helpful and supportive, people will abuse the luxury of your company financially, emotionally, physically, etc...That goes for family, so-called friends, and partners. And then they have the gall to question why you are unhappy when they're not working but judging you for working too much.
Anyway, I found this book to be insightful and too true when it came to some of the situations the writers found themselves. The advice is well-thought out and real. If people actually were held accountable for their actions, you'd hope they'd stop, right? Instead, for whatever reason, we have slews of lovely, smart women who "accept" this lesser than ideal behavior (guys who don't work, or refuse to keep a job, who can't keep a clean place, guys who are irresponsible in bed, with their $, with their kids, with their bodies, etc..). It's just not worth investing long term in someone who doesn't respect himself, let alone you. And yet, we fall into these obvious traps, making excuses and concessions for someone who is honestly not worth having.
These big red flags are blatant but we ignore them in hopes he'll change for us. Yeah, there is little hope of that. So for anyone who wants a brilliant wake-up call, a reminder she is better than being the "weekend girlfriend", who is more than a wallet, and someone warm to sleep against when he's up for it, this is an excellent read. Depending on who you are and what you are willing to live with, not everything relationship-wise is a deal breaker, but this book spells out a pretty decent list of those that are.