Home→Forums→Relationships→Letting go without closure
- This topic has 3 replies, 3 voices, and was last updated 11 years ago by chermich.
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November 24, 2013 at 12:01 am #45704chermichParticipant
I was in a same-sex relationship with a girl for 4 months. From the start, I knew she was going to leave to a continent on the otherside of the world for her postgrad studies at an Ivy League university. She’s a very driven and focused person who values academic accomplishments very highly. I expected it to be a casual dating/friendship thing, however it got emotionally intense from the start, with her talking about the pain of seperation 4 months down, sending me songs that reminded her of us. We spoke everyday and met often, talking about our families, our past, or dreams. 1.5 months before she left, we had a talk about us and decided not to pursue a long distance relationship (actually, I suggested that because I suspected it’s what she might want. She agreed.) We decided to move towards being friends as the we wanted to maintain the friendship we had formed.
The following weeks were a blur of distance followed by closeness, and distance again as she kept re-drawing the boundaries and I went along with it. We spent the last few days before she left together, and she wrote a lovely letter about how she felt about us, and again, with the hopes that the closeness would stay. I felt sad but with a good sense of closure when she left, knowing that we had made the best of our time together. I’ve let my guard down with this relationship as I’ve never done before, been more open with my thoughts, feelings and insecurities. I was looking forward to our friendship to come as she still meant a lot to me. We talked daily when she went there and she said it was hard to let go, and that it’ll hurt if I pulled away. A few days later, she said that I meant a lot to her, but that she might be going quiet in the coming weeks to focus on her work, but she would still be thinking of me and that she wanted to still be a part of my life. As her classes started the following week, we were texting and talking less. Our last conversation on the phone was still warm and affectionate, but by the next day, she started sounding very distant and with very short, flippant responses. And then nothing for a week. I decided to give her space since she was probably busy. Within a week, I received a short email informing me that she was unsharing a calendar she had previously shared with me, and that the longer she stayed there, the less she wanted to come back. I didn’t reply. And after a few weeks, I deleted her from Facebook because I wanted to stop checking her FB page, as it was not helping. I’ve not contacted her since the week she went quiet.
It’s been 2 months and while the relationship was short, I feel wounded by what had happened. I’ve always been big on keeping myself safe in relationsips. But with one so intense in which opened up so much, it hurt to feel the other person pull away, and not even gradually. I had made my peace with the relationship ending (or so I thought), but I can’t help wondering what happened. We went from being so close, to so distant so quickly. Whether my own fear of being hurt and insecurities made me pull back, and then get hurt when she was still not reaching out. I’ve been reading quite a bit on learning to love without fear, and without expectations. I’m wondering if I failed to do that – that I had loved with expectations, and got disappointed as a result when her tone and approach changed. I don’t have it in me to talk to her or write her an email because I dont think I could handle the possible response, or lack thereof. How do I move on? Was it my insecurities that caused this change in our dynamic?
November 24, 2013 at 5:45 pm #45728LauraParticipantI read this post and I feel as though maybe I can’t give advice, but I can relate. I seem to have walked a similar road, but I am a little farther along down that road, now it being seven months since my boyfriend of over two years broke up with me, tearing me apart. We lived together, cooked pancakes together in our Brooklyn apartment, watched Netflix marathons on Sundays and it felt as if we had it all. We did.
The details of the breakup are ugly and maybe that’s why I can’t even talk about them. Long story short in one week I had to move out. Someone who told me that they would be there forever suddenly wanted nothing to do with me. He met me a few times over the summer (this happened in May)..told me that he had not given up on us, but he had not come to a decision yet. During this time I went through what you are now – should I contact him? Should I call him? If he called me, I would hang on every word he said. I wanted to reach out every second, but the fear of rejection was paralyzing. Eventually he called me shortly after labor day and said he never wants to look back. He never did. Not one phone call, not one email, not one text message.
I could not understand how he was able to not only flip a switch, but also turn his back on our bond. I would have given it a second shot based on our bond alone. I know he saw it differently, and he saw me differently, I guess. I had expectations too.
Our birthdays went by, and soon the holidays will come and I am so afraid of going through them without him by my side. I wonder every day if he has these same fears. It has been seven months. I am sitting here in my apartment, one of my own now, amongst my things, things that are mine and only mine because everything we shared had to go. I couldn’t look at it.
My advice to you is to try your best to be kind to yourself. If you want to hibernate and cry for a weekend, do it. Honor these emotions. It means you are honoring your relationship. You are not insecure, everyone has a choice, and she chose (for whatever reasons) to close you out of her life. This hurts. Bad. I know. On the bright side, you have a choice too. Don’t let someone who does so little for you control so much of you. At least, that is what I am going for…
good luck my friend.
November 24, 2013 at 11:24 pm #45785Francis VParticipantHi Chermich,
I’m sorry to hear about the pain that you are going through. It’s always ok to feel the pain as it will help you on yur healing process. sometimes, it’s really quite hard to understand why something really good has to end. The best thing that yu can do right now is to learn the value of acceptance. slowly rebuild your life and heal your self from the pain and hurt that was caused by the breakup.
I’d like to share some videos from our friend, Clay as this might help you further.
How to Get Over a Breakup >> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qpmAqz9Gysg
Is acceptance really just about giving up? No, it’s about not resisting your experience of life>> http://relationshipinnergame.com/added-suffering/Hopes this help.
All the best.
November 25, 2013 at 5:41 am #45795chermichParticipantThank you, Laura. I can’t imagine that it was easy to share that but I deeply appreciate it. The end of relationships is always painful, but I always feel there is a respectful way to end it, to honour it.
My feelings fluctuate often, and I’m trying to keep the focus on what is within my control. What you said about honouring the emotions and the relationship made me rethink how I have been handling this. I’ve been swinging between thinking what I did wrong, or feeling anger towards her, and thus frustration with myself for greiving because I feel like by doing so, I’m giving the relationship more importance and weight that she did. But if it is important for me, then I need to honour it, regardless of how she sees it. It’s a new pespective and one that I shall try to shift towards to.
Love what you said about not letting someone who does so little for you control so much of you. Slowly, I am getting myself there. Or trying to, at least.
We shall come out of this stronger. 🙂
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