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April 23, 2019 at 3:11 am in reply to: Trying to deal with anxiety and loss after relationship break up #290227MichelleParticipant
Hey Shelby.
All good here, awesome Easter weekend, sunny and everything, unheard of! I suppose like Christmas, Easter can get a bit much if you spent all the time together. Trust it didn’t end badly at least.
Booked my flights to South Africa for later this year so now excitedly figuring out where to go & stay.
@Kkasxo – how was the holiday for you? Hope you got to get out and enjoy the sunshine too and perhaps make some progress on figuring out your way forwards, leaving those anxieties behind. Still here to help however I can.MichelleParticipantHey X,
How goes it? Lovely Easter break here – even had sunshine, very rare for the UK! Good to see the really helpful input from GL here too.
I’ve mulled over what you have shared and the articles you’ve referred to etc. I’m thinking what comes through loudest is perhaps very simple at the heart of it all, lack of experience and confidence in dating/relationships, some unfortunate examples to date and a slow realisation that relationships aren’t like much else of early life. As in it isn’t about working/trying harder, learning and following the rules and getting your ‘rewards’ like work/school. As you say – it’s giving up on the Disney dream of being good and waiting and your prince will arrive, doesn’t happen like that.
So much of what you write is about what you have either learned, read or been advised by someone, looking outside for answers, for someone to simply be able to tell you what to do to achieve success. You often write comments about what “all women want/hard-wired” and the like – but you know intellectually no such comment can hold true for everyone. Everyone is different, wants different things, gets irritated by different things. So, it really doesn’t matter what I or anyone else thinks about each of the men so far and whether you should have tried for longer. What matters is that you knew you didn’t like such and such a behaviour or didn’t feel interested enough to respond differently and so each one fizzled out for it’s own reasons.
It’s unhelpful to look entirely to the external world as to what everyone else does, be it in books, films, research, blogs, whatever. Whilst it’s a good way to get other perspectives, it needs to be matched by gaining experience, personal knowledge in what you want and where you feel you can compromise as needed. This is what early dating in your younger years is usually all about, the learning what you like, what you don’t like – same as when you travel and try foreign food, some’s great, some isn’t… It isn’t about creating a check-list but just like anything else, the more you know what you want, the better the chances of finding it. You mention money a lot in your examples, who pays etc. Again, it doesn’t mater what I or the general world thinks, there is no ‘right’ answer. But if you know you want someone who is financially sound and willing to spend it looking after you – if it’s one area where you don’t want to compromise, then you don’t and when you go on dates that indicate the men aren’t that way inclined, then it’s simple to see there was no point continuing.
Like everything, sounds simple like that. The hard part is determining what you yourself care about, what are your fundamental values, wants. Not what others tell you to want to be happy. Equally, no point at all in pretending to be something you are not to attract others, e.g. the cooking, the nail-painting, smart phones. It’s not you, so why would any relationship started based on a false impression of you be a relationship that you would want, unless you are literally looking for a man to look after you regardless, which I don’t think is where you are at?
Yes, the pool of available, healthy men gets smaller as we age and pair up but in the same way you are still available, there are others in there. Like looking for jobs, it doesn’t hurt to practice interviews ( dates ) literally to gain experience, practice. Look on those few disaster dates ( in your view ) as exactly that, time spent practising and figuring out what you like and what you don’t. It will help you appear less vulnerable, innocent and stop attracting those Cat 1’s, who tend to pick up on that vibe.
Lastly – if you know/suspect you are an anxious attachment type then I’d give you the same advice I gave Shelby/Kkasxo. Why wouldn’t you want to spend this time healing yourself towards a secure attachment style so as to give your future relationships the best chance possible. Looking for a secure-type partner to do the work for you is not the best option.
Hope helps.
MichelleParticipantHey X,
Was out yesterday celebrating our 19th anniversary, so a little delayed getting back here. Here goes….
Q1. Yes, that’s exactly what I meant by the restaurant analogy. If you are picking men based on one set of criteria, then it is not too surprising when they don’t magically match the real criteria you want them to have. It is much easier/normal for people to value the short-term ( physical looks, instant attraction, chemistry… ) than to think about the longer-term. It’s why it’s called a gut reaction and it’s not a bad thing – but it’s just one piece of information. Since you know you have a history of choices that haven’t made you happy then it’s worth spending some time thinking through and embedding what you really want, hence the ask on the top 5. Now I’m not suggesting you mentally run everyone through a checklist since agreed, it doesn’t work that way, you don’t know enough about anyone until you start finding out the reality, finding out more. So through conversations, through dates, slowly gaining more knowledge, experience – not through assessing them further in your head, in your imagination.
Do I mean you should start dating people you aren’t attracted to – no. I don’t think you can fake attraction and you shouldn’t have to. But I do think you could try to keep an open mind for longer before dumping people into the friend zone. Some people become more attractive the more you get to know them, as they open up to you. Given your current method isn’t working, trying a different approach is the only way the outcome can change ( a la Einstein’s famous quote re insanity is doing the same thing and expecting different results ).
Q2. It’s a good list of goals – how many of them are you actively pursuing, i.e. all I’m really asking is do you have a balanced life or do you have a lot of spare time to spend dreaming and imagining up your perfect man and how life will be great only if/when you have met the right man. Most people I know end up meeting their partner when they weren’t looking for him, when their lives were full in a good way and they were happy.
Q3. It’s good you have considered the father figure aspect. I believe it has less to do with age than looking for people who can take care of you, make sure you feel safe, protect you from the world when needed and who will provide direction/guidance and generally mean you don’t need to take such responsibility for your own life. So people who are either in positions of power, authority or have those kind of qualities attract you when looking to replace the father figure, not the age thing. Do you tend to feel the chemistry, this family portrait thing with men who resemble your father? Especially given your childhood and lack of attention/love, it would not be surprising to still be looking to fill that hole with a relationship plug.
Your mother sounds difficult and you sound like you are still carrying expectations of hers. I’m glad you have managed to cut contact to once/week – daily is ridiculous. Well done. I know from experience it is hard to work through determining your own values and not still living to those given you by your parents. Take the marriage example – understand completely on that one. My partner and I are not married and when I was still insecure it used to worry me – and it took me a while to work out that I was only worried as it did not meet my parent’s expectations, hopes whereas the big wedding, the 2.4 kids was just not actually me, not something I wanted. This comes back to goals again and determining your own values/aims – learning to stop having your mother in your head judging you for not being married yet and therefore ‘not good enough’ , ‘not pretty/ladylike enough’. All untrue but hard to recognise when still judging yourself with your mother’s voice and so damaging to your self-esteem.
Q4. Ha – excellent, probably way too much detail for here but hey, yep, seems you’ve ticked that box well and good. It’s just odd that the first thing that comes to your mind when attracted to someone is to hug them. Back to the theory that you are really looking for affection, love but are assessing people instantly on sexual chemistry instead.
Now to your questions!
1. So first, not convinced I agree that like attracts like, often seems it’s that opposites attract. And if you look at most of the stats people throw around, there are apparently nowhere near enough secure-style attachment people in the world to match the number of relationships in the world! So given that, what’s important these days in determining if a relationship is going to be good for the long-haul is all about being able to help each other grow, not expecting perfection all the time, not buying into the Disney view of romance. Most people are just not that self-aware or used to questioning their feelings, reactions as to what’s best for the long-term instead of short-term instant gratification. Mark M does a good piece on this ( ‘F… your feelings’, on his blog ).
1a. Do you believe you are worthy of a good man? Per above – are you still expecting it all to happen magically or are you willing to deal with the reality of the world, the reality of others. No-one is perfect and I don’t believe there is only ‘the one’, indeed my own life story so far tells me otherwise. This is why it’s worth being curious enough to learn more about people before discarding them. Is my other-half perfect, ofcourse not in the same way I am not. But we have had an amazing journey so far and I know him way better each day as we grow together – the love today is incomparable to what I felt at the start, richer, truer, sturdier. Could I have known that at the start – absolutely not.
2. I think it is very much down to how the child-you perceived it at the time – which is why twins/siblings can grow up so differently in the same environment, they will have perceived the experience differently based on their own perspectives, emotions. Regardless of the actual reality, if you felt disconnected, lacking attention or protection from your parents at the time, that’s going to leave you with a hole to fill. This is where Anita was going with her questions, to help you recognise that what you are looking for from a relationship can’t fill that hole – it’s like trying to put a square peg in a round hole – it’s not going to heal that hurt.
I have family over for Easter here so if I’m slow getting back to your responses don’t worry, I’ll get there. Hope it helps in meantime.
MichelleParticipantHey Curiousgeorge.
First, love the name, nice choice.
One of the things that helped me a lot which you may/may not have across already is learning about & practicing recognising that your emotions are separate to you, your identity. It may sound weird but by doing so you become increasingly aware of the gap there is between feeling something and re-acting to it. E.g. for me, if I am feeling anger or upset, I know the best thing for me is to go take a walk, calm down, get some space. That way I can then choose how I want to act – not just react to the emotion at that time. As I’ve practiced more, the need for physical space gets less and I’m able to be aware of the feeling without necessarily accepting it as ‘true’. It’s then possible to evaluate it, see if it’s telling me something useful or not. Look at it from different perspectives as nothing is ever black/white.
Part of being able to do that means having a good idea of what I value, what I would like to achieve. Mark Manson’s blog has some great articles on this for free, though his reading style may not be for everyone. I can go into this more myself if you think it would be helpful.
Take care – it’s a great step to be reaching out and looking to grow.
MichelleParticipantHey X.
First – thanks for the short and long versions. Glad you understood how it will help us.
So, as said upfront, I’m not a therapist or any kind of professional but I can offer a different perspective and where I can draw on my own experience, will do so – though obviously this doesn’t mean it will be right for you, just some data/different way of seeing reality. And as ever, if some questions are too personal for this forum and you don’t want to share, just say so.
Q1. Do you have any close friends ( male or female ). You know, the kind you can share anything with even if you haven’t seen them for ages, have proper conversations with, they understand you. As in, do you expect a romantic relationship to meet all your emotional needs?
Reason I ask – your language about what you are looking for from a romantic relationship doesn’t match up to the pre-selection criteria you are currently using. So, it’s like going out to a restaurant, assessing the menu, discarding 95% of the options available because they aren’t yellow ( or some other selection criteria ), receiving your banana custard pudding and then finding out it doesn’t fill you up as actually what you needed was lasagne ( or something, you get the idea.. ).
A daft example but I think you’ll get it. All your language ( hugs, crush, cuddling etc ) about what you want from a romantic relationship is not at all sexual in nature but pretty much all your pre-selection criteria are very chemistry/physically-based. So it is not too surprising that your approach so far hasn’t resulted in finding what you actually want/need. If you had to pick your top five things you wanted your long-term partner to be, what would they be in priority order?
Q2. What goals do you have for life outside finding a romantic relationship?
Reason for this one, how much of a balanced, full life do you have outside of looking for a partner. You do clearly get very over-invested, over-attached very quickly, needing very little to go on to conjure up a whole imagined exciting potential world. Take your current experience, a lot of very small occurrences, all could be as easily explained away as they can be built up into something exciting in your head. I’m not surprised given it will feel exciting after not feeling any interest for a while which is why I’m curious about what else excites you, grabs you attention and makes you feel alive outside a romantic relationship possibility.
Q3. Relationship with parents. Aware you/Anita started on this one and this isn’t my area so I’ll only ask what I can understand and this is something you might want want to pick up with one of those free online therapy/counselling websites you can find. Given you were attention-starved in your family life, it is not impossible this is why you tend to look to older men for hugs, attention, recognition that you exist/are important/valued and why one of your criteria is the family portrait assessment. What is the relationship with your mum & dad like now. Do you feel you are independent of them, is there much contact?
And last one for now Q4 – a slightly personal question, to be ignored if uncomfortable sharing here. Would you say you are comfortable/confident with sex, enjoy it, know how to ask for what you like etc? From reading through it seems you have limited physical experience, which might go some way to explaining why your pre-selection criteria are highly focused on this area of attraction, since it is the area you know least about so far and hence why it excites you so much more than other criteria. How were your teenage years, first kiss/fumble etc, did you date much back then at all, even if you don’t count them among your experiences here?
Take care, look forwards to hearing what you think. Long & short version…!
April 13, 2019 at 4:55 am in reply to: Trying to deal with anxiety and loss after relationship break up #288915MichelleParticipantHi X,
So, I found your old threads and have read some of them, not all, there is a lot as you say. Curious – have you ever tried to practice focusing your mind/thoughts? Whilst I appreciate sometimes it’s easiest just to mind-dump everything as it comes so to speak but I think practicing this could be helpful for you in calming your mind, seeing clearer. You clearly have a wide-ranging, well-read mind but it’s not so obvious how you go about sorting through the whole ton of data, information, thoughts, input?
Personally, the best way I have found for this is to write your first ‘mind-dump’ out in Word or something and re-read it back through – and then force yourself to ruthlessly prioritise it into the top three things you want to say. Like that hot air-balloon game where you have to name what gets thrown out first, it’s a way of helping work through identifying what seems most important, which is always telling by itself. It would be helpful going forwards for us I think, even if you still post the whole mind dump, to put at the top of each one what you considered the top three summary sentences/points to be.
Have a go at doing so about the other responses you wanted to write re my comments whilst I work through your old posts more. I’m going to suggest you post them under your old thread and let me know when you have done so and I’ll answer you there, if that works for you.
April 12, 2019 at 1:35 am in reply to: Trying to deal with anxiety and loss after relationship break up #288831MichelleParticipantHi X,
Sure, I’m fine with more questions and will say when I’m not – though since this is Shelby’s thread might be good to check with her as to if better to start your own thread perhaps.
In reverse order then – why am I on tinybuddha forums. It’s a good question since yes, I’m very aware I don’t fit the ‘normal’ profile, if there is such a thing. It’s a pretty simple answer though. Through a ton of hard work/determination/luck I was able to achieve a couple of major life goals last year, one of which was being able to leave my full-on job in London and have more time/freedom, especially to travel more. As such, I now have enough time to be able to give back and help others, another goal/value which is important to me. I looked into local volunteering but they need a regular once/week type commitment that doesn’t fit with my travel goals – and so online ‘helping’ was the obvious answer. I’ve read articles on tinybuddha in the past when struggling and so it seemed a good place to start, among other ways. You will see I’m not as active as most of the regulars on here and I’ll only contribute as/when I hope I have some relevant life experience/perspective to share that may help. Know your own limits!
Onto the next…”At least you now know enough to identify those you know won’t be a good healthy match”
Some interesting points in there. These are the ones that jumped out to me as worth thinking more about.
– Agree it’s helpful to be very self-aware, the more you know yourself the more you can recognise what is helpful/unhelpful for you to invest your time in, which is our most precious asset after all. Often we attract what we need, not necessarily what we want or think we want at that time. You have an intriguing mix of an analytical selection process combined with pretty much all physical attributes, chemistry, ‘family portrait’ and so on. A lot of pre-selection before really getting to know any of these people? It would be simple to say you are attracted to unavailable people so that there is no real danger of having to get emotional invested again but I suspect as you think about it, there’s more to it than that. Do you know why you value the physical so much more than the mental/character of potential partners, given it’s those that last longest and have way more impact on whether you are happy together or not. Again, nothing is right/wrong here, it’s just that you come across as someone who clearly enjoys using her brain but doesn’t appear to value that when assessing partners? I can understand why if very few men you meet pass these selection criteria that you get excited, attached to them – after all, not many pass right? People can be surprising you know, sometimes it is worth getting to know people before dismissing them because of such set criteria/expectations.
Last (first?! ) one: I certainly learned the hard way that it was only by being myself that I could really trust anything else was real
From my experience, it’s definitely the latter. When you do something you think is scary, like dis-agreeing with someone you’d usually just play along with for the sake of a smooth road, and the worst doesn’t happen,they don’t hate you forever etc, life goes on. And the more you do it, the more ‘proof’ you have of a different experience to your fears, lessening the fear so much until it becomes seemingly daft you were ever afraid of it. Once you get to the stage of being able to be yourself and not be concerned about what the outside world thinks, it’s pretty empowering. I read a great quote once, something along the lines of “someone can only make you feel bad about something if you feel bad about it yourself”. Essentially, if you have done your best to behave with your values, e.g. honesty, respect, love, compassion, whatever – then other’s judgement is simply that, their judgement, something you should consider but can reject if false.
Hope helps!
April 11, 2019 at 5:44 am in reply to: Trying to deal with anxiety and loss after relationship break up #288671MichelleParticipantHey Shelby,
Yup, I was really pretty bad too but had like zero idea at the time that it could be different. Very insecure and limited perspective/experiences partnered up with a confusing desire to want to explore, to want to know more although everyone around me then was content not to do so. About a year after my traumatic break-up I realised I was starting to sabotage a new relationship that had huge potential with the same old behaviours – I can remember very very clearly the day I decided I didn’t want to be this person anymore as I could see where it headed and the pattern of my life if I didn’t change.
And so began the long learning curve, the reading, the talking, opening up to adapting my way of seeing the world, seeing it truly as best as I could. Building my own self-confidence, my own values & desires, not just taking others handed down by either family, society or media. So yes, now I’m very much a secure attachment type as well as a million times more self-confidence and assertive, things I had always struggled with. Though much rarer these days I still have some triggers but I recognise them and can identify them for what they are, unfounded fears/doubts about myself and I’m able to deal with them myself, without needing to ask for re-assurance. Even if sometimes that means stomping off for walk to clear my head before dealing with whatever it was that sparked me! Honestly, it’s like night/day, the difference. Long journey, don’t think it ever ends once you open your eyes but the enlightenment becomes compelling – I think it’s why I travel so much now, more perspectives to be gathered for me yet.
Funnily enough, I’m wary of offering advice, I’ve mentored some people who have hung on my every word and I’ve had to always make it clear to them that that is just not helpful or healthy either. No-one else has the answers for you. I get why you are wary too. Especially as one of your triggers is change, and this is going to smell rather badly of that to your self-protective voice… No need to change unless or until you want to though, reading and learning about the options, the different ways of being & seeing, consider for yourself, see what feels right to you. I hope it goes well with your therapist tomorrow, look forwards to hearing whatever you want to share.
Btw – be warned……those house-sit sites can be very addictive…..!!
April 11, 2019 at 1:22 am in reply to: Trying to deal with anxiety and loss after relationship break up #288659MichelleParticipantAh see, I knew you was still in there somewhere Kkasxo!! And how awesome to have one of your best friends as a living example right in front of you – life is strange like that, it seems. Your quote is another good one – especially poignant given the recent death experience you’ve been through. Life really does fly by and it seems it only gets quicker as you get older. It’s funny actually, once you start doing all those things ( speaking your truth, not giving a sh*t about things that aren’t important and all the rest ) you start to wonder why you were quite so afraid of doing so in the first place. I certainly learned the hard way that it was only by being myself that I could really trust anything else was real. Afterall, if I was pretending to be to the world what I thought it wanted me to be – how could I believe what the world was showing me was true. But it was so damn scary being myself, if people rejected the ‘pretend’ me, who cared, it wasn’t me. But if they rejected me, now, that’s a whole other ballgame. Plus after so long of pretending, being a people pleaser, following the unspoken rules and expectations of my upbringing, my environment – it was really hard to know who I was anymore anyway.
And perhaps that’s as good a place as any to start on this journey – spending some time getting to know yourself again, what you value, what you stand for, no emotions attached either way. There are no good/bad answers – everyone is individual and it will be different for everyone. You don’t need to share on here unless you want to but make some time for yourself, get outside into the sunshine and just give yourself the freedom to ignore all your current circumstances and breathe freely. Let go of all those expectations for now. They can come later if/when needed. At the end of the day, this is all about gaining the strength to take control of your own life and be ok with events that you can’t. The wisdom being in knowing which are which – bit like that AA prayer.
If you haven’t already come across them, two books I found eye-opening/inspirational at the time were “You Can Be Happy No Matter What” – which sounds incredibly cheesy but was one of the best ways in to understanding the difference between thoughts and reality for me. Plus Oriah Mountain Dreamer’s “The Invitation” – also sounded way too ‘hippie’ for logical me but something in it rung true towards an authentic life, to being more how I wanted to be. A more modern version is Mark Manson’s blog “The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck”, which I usually love reading but he’s not going to be everybody’s style for sure…
Shelby m’dear – understand entirely and very happy to see you being honest about it. It’s hard enough as a naturally private person for me to post some of these things, so I’m glad you understood. Talking in person is always easier for sure. And yes, you can have a lot of very well-meaning people trying to help but absolutely agree, everyone has their own history, their own biases, their own current understanding of their world view which will colour their advice however well-meant. And a lot of people will try to get you to adopt their values, either with or without knowing it, as it validates their view of ‘they are right’, makes them feel more secure. But not necessarily helpful to you! Part of what I had to work through was recognising this, no longer accepting everything at face value but assessing if it was something I also considered ‘true’ or not. So I entirely get the wariness and tbh, would be concerned if you weren’t.
It’s good to hear you are interested in the idea of strengthening your inner self, in whichever way you find works for you. Obviously it’s not a “hey everything’s amazing all the time” thing, it doesn’t stop life throwing cr*p at you, but it does give you this weird sense of stability within, no longer looking to the outside world to fix things or wasting time on unhelpful anger, emotions no longer buffeted all over the place. Very handy for rolling with it when travelling!! It’s not that I’ll no longer discuss your relationship but more that perhaps I can help look at different perspectives, different ways of responding as a stable-attachment type – positive actions/thoughts. That sound helpful?
X – nice to hear from you – means a lot to know my experiences can help others. Like I always say, I don’t have all the answers, no one does, but if it helps others at all, that’s worth the sharing to me. Sounds like you are a little down the path of figuring yourself out which is good but still some way to go on valuing youself enough to attract the ‘right’ partner. At least you now know enough to identify those you know won’t be a good healthy match. My best advice, continue to grow and be the strong authentic version of yourself as you can – if I’ve learned anything it’s that the more you know what you want, the greater the chances of it happening as all your actions line up behind it.
Take care all – look forwards to hearing back.
April 10, 2019 at 1:49 am in reply to: Trying to deal with anxiety and loss after relationship break up #288427MichelleParticipantHey Shelby.
This is probably going to be one of those posts you won’t like but I hope you won’t run from it and will read it and consider it at the weekend when you hopefully have a bit of time to yourself. I suspect a lot of it you already really know since you are smart and perceptive enough to understand these issues and have been working through them in therapy.
You guys sound a classic avoidant/anxious combination – pretty much the polar opposite of what’s helpful for either of you as it stands. It’s why he runs every time you become needy or wanting/demanding to be closer – and why he triggers your anxieties when he doesn’t give the constant reassurance that you are loved, that you are safe, that you think you need from him.
The thing about anxiety though, as you know, the more you feed it, the worse it gets. E.g. he may tell you he loves you – you are ecstatic, yippee, finally! You feel fantastic, fulfilled – you are wanted, you are enough, it’s fantastic! A few days/weeks later you find the old insecurities creeping back, wait, you say, I wonder if he still loves me now, how much does he love me, if he really loved me enough he wouldn’t want to do x,y,z, he would want to be with me, I would be enough for him. Etc etc. So your helpful inner voice continues in this vein – I don’t understand, why are you ‘leaving’ me – I can’t be special enough, I must be lacking somehow. Rationality has flown out the window at this point, shouted down by the insecure you, demanding to be looked after, to have their needs met. And so you reach out, demanding more, asking to be made to feel whole again like it was before when it felt so good. Tell me again, how you love me, ask me to move in, marry me, do something special – demonstrate again how much I am loved, so that I know I am safe and happy again, I don’t want to feel afraid anymore. And so the circle goes on.
Now if you were with a secure attachment type, he would recognise these demands as what they are, underlying insecurities you need to deal with and that he can support you dealing with – but can’t deal with for you. And he could listen but not give in to the demands and in such a way, eventually, they lessen as they are ineffective, not getting the attention/response they want. And so, with his and others support, you work through your own insecurities and become able to meet your own needs, to not have that constant ball of anxiety in your stomach, worrying about everything, feeling inadequate, feeling scared, lonely. Now when he tells you he loves you, it brings you pleasure still, it still makes you happy – but you don’t NEED to hear it, you know it already because you know you are lovable, enough. And you know you would also be ok without it after time.
Being with an avoidant type though, this doesn’t happen. Instead, as you demand more, more closeness, more proof he loves you, more togetherness – he legs it. Either physically or emotionally, he retreats, looking to protect himself from the seemingly never-ending demands ( like, would you mind texting me once in a while……all the way up to let’s get married and have kids ) that will demand his attention, require him to give up something. So he withdraws, you try harder, he withdraws more etc. At this point you either leave, hoping for the ultimate “if I leave he will realise what he is missing” or you hang on in hope, try to pretend to be something you are not, pretending to be ok with not getting your needs met until it bursts out of you anyway.
So – all well and good (or not I guess!) – but how to break the loop. How can things change for the better, recognising this isn’t a pattern you want for the rest of your life. You can’t make him go to therapy or want to change or even to recognise that is his style – that’s outside your control. What is in your control is that you can work on yourself to become a non-anxious attachment type, to become the stable secure type that is able to have a long-term healthy relationship.
As such, all the discussion here on feeling blue, wanting him to be different, hoping for him to change, accepting you are the kind of woman who just puts up with it, it’s all pretty much wasted energy really. A way to distract from dealing what is within your control entirely, namely working on yourself. This is not about encouraging you to develop the strength to leave this relationship but to take responsibility and focus on developing yourself to give it the best chance possible – as well as strong enough to also be ok with it not being what you want, if that’s how it turns out.
I thought about this a lot as you remind me so much of myself back in my anxious days so I know this is possible. I’m not your therapist and I’m not an Anita , who does an excellent job of helping others delve into their why so no offence meant here! As you know I’m more pragmatic and forwards looking. So I’m not especially interested in working through your childhood as to why you are an anxious attachment type, it is what it is, what is of value is how to work through that. I am willing to help you work through dealing with your anxiety issues, to help with becoming the self-confident woman you can be, in control of her life and not letting life control her and hopefully someone able to then support her guy working through his own issues, instead of looking to him to save her.
I realise we have got close to this before and you have shied away from those kinds of questions. So if it isn’t something you are interested in working through here, I’m not offended or upset in the least – entirely your choice as ever. I just don’t think the most supporting or helpful thing I can do for you is to continue to listen and try to help when it isn’t about working on yourself. I know you think that if only this relationship would work out, all will be great, happy again. But I honestly don’t think it will be the kind of relationship, the kind of life you envision without working on yourself first. It’s not what will make you feel better long-term, however much it feels like it would be the answer now. I’ll still be here if you’re not interested and you will both still have to put up with my travel tales as/when – but I just wanted to explain upfront why I don’t think it’s helpful for me to encourage more unhelpful discussion around the relationship itself and so you’ll notice I won’t be responding to that.
Let me know – and incase you have made it this far still – yes, there are some good websites dedicated to putting together house sitters/home owners – sort of a Match.com for travellers! I use TrustedHouseSitters, which is the largest by far of opportunities but also of people looking. The other is MindMyHouse, which is much smaller and basically free at something like £16/yr whereas the bigger one is about £70 after you use a discount code which are usually available. I regularly get people asking us to sit now which is nothing short of awesome!
Kkasxo – amazing timing as ever….I’d just finished writing all that and you came and nailed it much better! This is at the guts of it all absolutely all about working on your own self-esteem. Even being able to recognise you are sad at not valuing yourself enough is a good step – recognising the need for change. Without a doubt I’m happy to help you on that front as much as I can too. I honestly think we all need to change this conversation into working towards something positive, however small. It can be too easy to be falsely comforted by sharing pain, looking for others in pain to agree how much it hurts and so on. I did that a lot after the break-up, seeking out people who would feed my need to agree how badly treated I’d been, how ‘bad’ he was and how ‘good’ I was ( i.e. he would come back, he would miss what he had etc ) . In the end, I realised it was all keeping me tied to the break-up, it wasn’t helpful or healthy.
Hope you both understand where I am coming from.
MichelleParticipantHey Ashley,
So everyone has a tribe, it just takes some people a lot longer to find theirs, especially true when you don’t fit the cultural “norm” around you, whichever particular city/country you may be in. I know, since we have similarities here and in perspectives. You will also find you may find a tribe and then as you grow/change, you have to find a new tribe. So being able to build those kind of connections, meaningful ones, real honest ones that actually matter, that make you think and value the relationship and aren’t just ‘fluff’ ( I think you will know what I mean here? ) is a crucial skill to develop. And the thing is, once you have gained this skill, you start finding members of your tribe all over the world. I travel a lot these days and so long as I can speak the language it is rare not to form these kind of connections, sometimes only briefly, sometimes for longer. But always a ‘proper’ connection, which is what you are looking for.
And I think perhaps that is the way for you to approach this, as a new skill to be developed, practiced, improved. A different kind of intellectual achievement. This is not about pretending to be something you are not to be able to make friends, connections – that way doesn’t work, you will also feel inauthentic yourself and so the connection will not feel genuine. But logically you only have three choices as I see it.
– You can continue as you are, increasing the number of people you try to meet to increase the chances of finding people who are willing to invest time in getting past your initial condescending/aggressive impression and therefore get to know the real you.
– You change your style enough to practice the listening, the two-way give/take, the genuine interest in the other person’s view point, even if it is entirely illogical and emotion-based. I.e. the things Mark is asking about. Basically temporarily reducing the Debator personality enough to allow others in and find you.
– Or it may be worth thinking about why you present a face to the world outside work that is not the real you to start with. Being very assertive, calling bullshit as you see it, being the ‘badass’ and so on, it’s all a very good way to thrive in the fields you work in but it is not so successful outside the world of work. I get it can be hard to be yourself at work, c-level corporate environments are weird bubbles of the world from my experience and it does take very different skills to negotiate them. This club may simply be another such environment where you do not feel safe enough to let this mask drop, to let the real you shine through as in your trips to the Casbah. I.e. you can still be true to your Debator personality without being ( meaning to or not ) arrogant to others.
MichelleParticipantHey Varo, glad it helped. I think it’s great you can see how to take lessons from this experience and work on yourself – very positive indeed. Many people would continue to blame others, to blame circumstances, anything but themselves. But only by taking ownership, taking responsibility for yourself and your feelings will anything change for the better. So well done, look forwards to hearing how you go as you start out on this journey.
It does sound like basically you guys moved in together before ready and whilst I get the financial pressure to do so, sometimes money isn’t the most important factor and it’s worth taking your time. Living by yourself for a while will be invaluable in getting past those bad old behaviours from your previous relationship and learning how to be the kind of man you want to be, the kind of example to your kids you want to be. It is so so easy to slip into being lazy and blame others, want others to take care of you – so good to hear you are working on not being that kind of person. There is a ton of great advice across this website so keep reading and enjoy the journey.
MichelleParticipantHi Varo,
Mind dumps are often the best way to start sharing and working through issues. It is difficult to start a new healthy relationship without giving yourself space to become your own person again first, to be able to stand on your own two feet, be happy on your own. But it often happens and life is not black/white, right/wrong. I do think it’s a big part of why you have become clingy, looking to this new relationship to look after you, take care of you. I think your new girlfriend has done the best thing possible to give your relationship a chance tbh – standing up for setting healthy boundaries and expectations is not easy and you should try to see this as a positive thing, she’s looking to take some time out to see how to make it work in a way that is a positive experience for both of you – otherwise you would have simply remained broken-up. Six weeks is not such such a long time to wait to get your own place – and I would not take her being ok to see you in a B&B in the meantime as a negative thing but rather a good sign she wants to give you both the space needed to take it a bit slower, talk things through. If you truly are interested in continuing with this relationship, try to be content with letting her setting the pace for a while, practice being independent, being the man she was first attracted to.
Seems to me the whole moving in together early thing was based on entirely different expectations from you both – I am guessing you did not discuss these expectations before moving in together the first time, lay out the ground rules so to speak – so important especially when children are involved. For example, why do you think you became lazy once you’d moved in together? What did you stop doing that you used to do – were you expecting her to run the house by herself for example? Did you have an expectation she would help look after your kids when they are visiting? The point of moving in together is that both parties should have hopes it will be a positive experience – what do you think the positive things are that you brought to that experience for her? If/when this relationship continues to develop down this path again, look to avoid making the same mistakes, talk through how it will work, what you will both bring to the experience.
Hope helps, let us know how it goes.
April 8, 2019 at 10:36 am in reply to: Trying to deal with anxiety and loss after relationship break up #288101MichelleParticipantHey Shelby.
Well not knowing is better than an outright no in some ways, though obviously an outright no would have set you free from wondering. Sounds like his standard operation is to run away from things that scare/challenge him, not an ideal trait for a life-term partner, bit like Mr A2… Do you happen to know why he finds the idea scary – is it the commitment required or the changes he envisions the lifestyle changes would bring. I wouldn’t be surprised if he sees living with you/having a child as a potential huge restriction on his current freedom. I’m guessing you may have an in-built expectation in your dream of your future life that he would change, spend more/most of his time at home with you and your family which he has probably picked up on. Do you think you would be happy living together & with your child if he still left to go on multiple trips/support his family etc. It may help reduce his fear if you can describe together a positive view of how you could be together and he still has his freedom when needed.
I understand not wanting to give up on the dream, on the potential. But in all honesty, I think the interesting question for you is thinking about how long do you wait. How long do you continue to hope, to go round these circles with him, hoping for him to be ready?? Is there a limit at all or do you hold on until the end of your life? Do you think you’d still be ok that it was the best choice for your life??
I’m not saying at all you need to choose to give him up now, not at all, always your choice and I understand that holding on to that hope is better for you right now than facing your fears you may end up alone. But it may be worth thinking about how much of your life you are prepared to give up whilst you do hang on in hope and see how it goes. I guess at some point realistically the waiting will be too long for a biological child yourself, so do you see yourself still waiting and adopting if/when he decides he is ready? Or is staying childless and hopefully being with him going to be ok with you you think? I guess what I’m thinking is that when I’ve been in tough or scary circumstances I’ve given it a time limit to improve or for me to adjust – and if nothing has changed that’s when I’ll know it’s time to move on, having given it my absolute best. How much more of your life do you think you want to invest in this particular path?
See – I’m rambling now! I forgot to say, it’s Granada in south Spain, not the Caribbean – but maybe some time! I have trekked round Equador and if it’s anything to go by I can imagine how stunning your man’s photo’s are, it was an awesome place. Is he doing Machu Pichu? It was actually our first ever house-sit, something you could think about doing in Aus/NZ if interested as it’s very popular there – free accommodation in return for looking after someone’s place and often their pets. Win/win!
MichelleParticipantHey limbikanimaria,
A different interpretation could be he logged in to try to see if you were still active? After all, that’s exactly what you have done following the half-conversation on expectations for going forwards. I’d suggest that unless you were more enthusiastic to his “no no, I’d be happy to call you my girlfriend” reply than you have written in the conversation above, then he may actually be feeling more insecure than you at this point. If you think about it, you made several comments about being ok with keeping things open, which he may well have interpreted as that being what you wanted….
As said, a follow up conversation really needed, with or without mentioning you’ve seen him on there. Assuming you do actually want to be exclusive, I’d just go with something like ” I was thinking about what you said about being your girlfriend which sounds great and so I’ve decided to delete/hide my Match.com profile whilst we see where this goes- what do you think? “. Always be as honest/open as you can, I know it’s scary in the early days but so much better than misunderstandings potentially damaging a bright new relationship.
Hope it goes well!
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