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InkyParticipant
Hi Asja,
Yes, there are good men in the world.
That said, you staying with your husband isn’t working. That’s what you say, and it should be the only thing you say: “It’s not working”. At the very least get your own place and only meet with him in public. This will cut down on any nonsense. He should go to Anger Management for at least a year if he has any hope of one day working it out with you. This is non-negotiable.
Good Luck!
Inky
InkyParticipantHi Athena,
As soon as the children are adults, I would leave. Is it financial? While they are all school aged, make your own money and have your own bank account if you haven’t yet. This will prepare you to walk out the door with confidence when the time comes. Make your life more and more independent from his with each passing year. You can live without sex. And when you do set yourself free, be free! You don’t have to settle for your old childhood friend. Or anyone!
Best,
Inky
InkyParticipantHi Missxm,
I akin throwing tantrums like this to a bad habit. You can clearly control this as you don’t act this way in front of your boss, strangers, or, say, your mother. Pretend your loved one is a person you just met last week and you are on your second date. Then when these feelings come up you can squash them with sheer politeness.
Try it! It works! My husband and I have been on our “sixth date” for twenty years!
Best,
Inky
InkyParticipantHi JonathanSeagull,
Why was she dating when she had an infant son?? That I don’t like.
You don’t know how he will one day be as the boy is now a toddler, and toddlers are notorious for being, well, DIFFICULT. Then the child will enter into the cute, adorable stage. When he’s in school you will most clearly see his true personality. Then when he’s a teenager he will either be tremendously difficult… or you won’t see him at all.
Either way, are you willing to pay for college one day? Have (or not have) future children based on him? Discipline him (or not discipline him)? Love him like he’s your own? Be able to cut off all relationship with him if you and the mother break up?
I say congratulations for being so honest with yourself! And perhaps leave, for the good of everyone involved.
Best,
Inky
P.S. I was a step child on both sides. Loved at most by one, and tolerated at best by the other. Do you want the boy to feel “tolerated” all of his young life?
- This reply was modified 6 years, 8 months ago by Inky.
InkyParticipantHi Katie,
I must be missing something because I dated my college roommate’s brother and OF COURSE I would date her brother! Why wouldn’t I??
To me her dating someone you used to go out with is egregious. Not dating a friend’s brother!
It sounds like you need to change your whole crew of friends.
And no, you have every right to dislike her. Why would you like her? You just have to be polite with his family, but you don’t have to like them.
And if he’s a Senior, your time together will (in all likelihood, sorry) be coming to an end soon. At a certain point it’s kind of weird for a guy to still be dating a girl from high school (happened to my daughter, and she understood).
Shed the girlfriend and keep the boyfriend for now.
Best,
Inky
InkyParticipantHi Andrea Carolina,
You are 18, but are you still in HS or are you a young Freshman in College? If you are still in HS, the problem may be that these boys have known you forever and view you as their sister. If you are in College, you should feel lucky that the Sophomore guys haven’t approached you yet! Even so, you may have that sweet caring older/younger sister energy about you.
I think the thing to do is to be open to older guys. Unless you want to wait around for your crowd to grow up.
Best,
Inky
InkyParticipantHi Kylee,
Girl Code dictates that two friends should never be intimate with the same guy. Did you guys know the other one had been with him a few years ago? Or did you both come across this knowledge? If you slept with him first she should never have gone there. If she slept with him first you should never have gone there.
It doesn’t matter that you both proclaimed that you weren’t serious.
Now she is hurt.
It is a vacation/visit and I’m assuming this guy would just be an occasional occurrence. That said, you have to be SUPER sensitive about your friend. No more parties where it is a group thing. See him on your own (a big maybe). Never mention it. And never mention him again. If she brings it up, shrug and say you haven’t heard from him in a while or that you ran into him once.
If you want to see him as a boyfriend, it has to be serious, and you would probably be sacrificing a friendship for it.
Good Luck,
Inky
InkyParticipantHi Fruzsina,
I know lots of happy, upbeat people. I’m not close friends with a lot of them, they constantly reach out, there’s nothing wrong with them, but seeing them feels more like an obligation to be fulfilled. It’s not that I groan inwardly when I get an invitation to hang out, but it’s all so surface-y.
And yes, some are “needy”. I get that you feel lonely. But you really should feel comfortable with yourself and by yourself.
It’s OK to be alone. It’s OK to let a true friendship grow organically by itself without trying to force it.
For once, let people come to you.
Best,
Inky
InkyParticipantHi bob,
When a woman is done, she’s done.
It doesn’t matter that she chased you in the past. It doesn’t matter that she wanted to get married right away, or was clingy.
Even though you bought the ring, even though you had a deep bond, even though you finally realized you loved her, it doesn’t matter now.
She made the decision. She’s done.
If she is indeed gorgeous, I’m not surprised she found another guy so quickly. The other guy was probably lurking in the background this whole time, patiently waiting for the relationship’s demise, alluring her with the promise of a better match.
Dude, if you truly want her back, your best bet right now is to back WAY off! Don’t contact her again for at least a year. Every time she decides to ignore your or says “No”, that is only working to solidify her decision in her mind. This time you wait for THIS relationship to fail. THEN go to her (remember, still go no contact until 2019) THEN say, “How are you doing?”
Good Luck,
Inky
InkyParticipantHi Kai,
In situations such as these, it is really helpful to run by the conversation with a professional. Sometimes a relationship isn’t working out and it has nothing to do with your depression/anxiety/personality disorder. Blowing up and blocking you, for example, is a very immature response on his part, even if you were depressed/anxious/disordered at the time.
No matter what your issues are, breaking up and then getting back together (rinse, repeat) is a bad habit to get into. If you’re broken up, stay broken up, and perhaps revisit the relationship next year if you’re both free. This gives space and maturity time to work its magic.
Best,
Inky
InkyParticipantHi Newlifestartsnow,
I wouldn’t talk to her. But if she dares ask for your notes again, simply say, “No” with no explanation. The awkwardness will fall squarely back on her. It sounds like the friendship is on the outs anyway if you feel like you are friends only when it suits her.
It would be different if she made it to class most of the time.
If you’re too scared to be direct, just say one of these each time she asks: “I wasn’t in class that day”, “My pen ran out”, “I’ll get those notes to you later” (not), “I can’t find the notes!!”, “I fell asleep in class!!!”, “I was talking to this hot guy during class and didn’t exactly write anything down!”, have the notes be illegible, have the notes be in shorthand.
Oh my goodness, you can fun with this!!! She will quickly learn that it’s actually easier to get to class. If only to befriend someone else to give her their notes or to meet the imaginary hot guy!
Good Luck,
Inky
InkyParticipantHi Sophie,
I know this isn’t what you want to hear, but don’t move in together. If you want to get married, statistically that is less likely to happen when you are roommates. And if you’re unhappy one day, then you are “stuck”.
I always kept my own place when I was dating my husband. Yes, it drove him nuts that we had two places, but life (and our relationship) was so much simpler.
Best,
Inky
InkyParticipantHi Jasmine,
If he left just because of a little stress, it’s better you found this out now rather than years from now. View it as a blessing! You need someone strong enough to handle everyday life, not some wilting violet personality.
Best,
Inky
InkyParticipantHi Sapnap3,
I would move to take care of your elderly mother. He will come back, having made his DECISION, and be shocked that you are gone. He will contact you. You will say that your priorities come first and you can’t put your life on hold while some man makes his DECISION for YOUR future. That you are in the States and he knows where to find you. That you are dating other people.
He will fly to the States and propose. That is my prediction.
If that doesn’t happen, at least you took your power back.
Best,
Inky
P.S. Never too old!
InkyParticipantHi musician16,
Here is a thought which may or may not be true: I could see someone cheating with one person. I could even (maybe) see someone cheating with two. But four? Unlikely. The next time you think of the four girls, laugh and say (while laughing), “Yeah, right!”
If you, he, or someone brings it up, say, “I’ll tell my seventh lover he says hello!”
The little dude must have had some kind of anger or size problem to even attempt to cheat on you with four (FOUR!) other people.
My advice to you is not to believe it. The reality is probably closer to one he actually cheated on you with, one he had an emotional affair with, one who made out with him while drunk, and a model who said “hi” to him once.
Best,
Inky
- This reply was modified 6 years, 8 months ago by Inky.
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