Anonymous
Post 10/21/2016 12:21     Subject: Re:Explain "trust but verify"

When car shopping do this: don't trust and make sure to verify.
Anonymous
Post 10/21/2016 12:06     Subject: Explain "trust but verify"

Anonymous wrote:A phrase made famous by Reagan during the Cold War. It's a Russian proverb, and I think it meant he wanted relations to improve (trust) but we were still enemies so he couldn't trust blindly (verify).

In the context of an intimate relationship, I would say it means you want to trust blindly, but you don't, so you verify.


It implies don't trust OP is actually correct in her thinking. It's an oxymoron.
Anonymous
Post 10/20/2016 21:10     Subject: Explain "trust but verify"

I've never heard of this for an adult to adult relationship, but for parent and teen relationship. Like calling the parents of the kid that yours says he's hanging out with.
Anonymous
Post 10/19/2016 23:56     Subject: Explain "trust but verify"

If you think they're cheating, TRUST your gut feeling, but VERIFY (get hard evidence) that this is actually true.
Anonymous
Post 10/19/2016 18:51     Subject: Explain "trust but verify"

Trust, but not blindly.

I trusted my ex wife until she gave me too many reasons not to. I found out about her second affair by digging through her purse. After we got divorced I discovered that she'd had closer to 7 affairs over the course of our relationship.
Anonymous
Post 10/19/2016 18:41     Subject: Explain "trust but verify"

I agree with first response.

You assume the person is being honest, but you make sure somehow.
Anonymous
Post 10/19/2016 17:56     Subject: Explain "trust but verify"

A phrase made famous by Reagan during the Cold War. It's a Russian proverb, and I think it meant he wanted relations to improve (trust) but we were still enemies so he couldn't trust blindly (verify).

In the context of an intimate relationship, I would say it means you want to trust blindly, but you don't, so you verify.
Anonymous
Post 10/19/2016 17:48     Subject: Explain "trust but verify"

I think it means more like, assume the best. So if you see him at a baseball game with another girl, assume it's his sister or cousin, and don't jump to the conclusion he's cheating on you.

Instead of going home and burning all his clothes on the sidewalk, go home and text him "Hey, I saw you from across the way at the Cubs game today." Then he'll respond "Yeah, my cousin was in town so I took her - you should have come by to say hi!"
Anonymous
Post 10/19/2016 17:46     Subject: Explain "trust but verify"

I've seen this posted here somewhat often.
If you're verifying, doesn't that say you're not trusting? Or am I understanding it wrong?