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Does forgiveness have an expiration?

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Viewing 15 posts - 16 through 30 (of 31 total)
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  • #99464
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear flyby:

    Figuring out what motivates people: first thing is to examine what we assume motivates a person in our lives and remove that assumption, think about other possibilities. We jump to conclusions, assuming we know. In the first ever good therapy I attended five years ago, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) with lots of Mindfulness skills taught, I learned to evaluate thoughts for the truth or lack of. I found out that we, people, assume so much that is not true. CBT is a scientific approach to understanding what is really going on.

    Also in therapy I learned the value of asking people questions and evaluating the answers. Figuring out reality is something else. Are you familiar with CBT?

    You wrote above that you gave up trying to figure him out. Then you wrote that you are trying to figure out what was making him keep you within arms reach. Do you want to try to figure the latter out here?

    anita

    #99487
    flyby
    Participant

    I was a cognitive neuroscience major in school, but my experience was mostly biological. I haven’t tried CBT before, but I will bring that up as a possible interest to pursue. If your post (s) are any indication of CBT, I’ve been responsive.

    For me it would be aid in closure to figure out what motivated him to keep me at arms reach and to repeatedly not respect my clearly stated boundaries. In the past relationship that brought me to therapy a few years back, hearing that his abusive actions were because he had a biological mental health problem. He was bipolar, off meds, so he wasn’t the person I thought he was when I fell in love with him. iT was easier to forgive myself for the failure of that relationship. I learned how to look for signs of this and it has been helpful in avoiding situations with this type of person I am obviously not able to deal with.

    I think I have a better chance of figuring myself out than I do this guy out. As my friends had concluded many years ago, and as he has recently concluded for himself, he is “just a bad person who does bad things to me”. My conclusion, which as you said is most likely not true, is that he was an unhappy person inside and he uses people to feel better about himself. He took my forgiveness was like him forgiving himself for the past actions although he never fully accepted responsibility. As for keeping me at arms length, I’d like to think it was because he knew he was such a bad person he didn’t want to hurt me by messing up a relationship doomed from the start. As to why he would isolate me and keep me away from his friends and family? Possibly that I represented guilt and shame?
    These questions are distracting me in the short term but I can’t get them out of my thoughts.

    #99490
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear flyby:

    Your Master Degree is is Cognitive Neuroscience? That is very impressive!

    I went back to previous posts, first I think were in July of last year. I was looking for information on what this 20 year on and off again man did to you, what hurtful things he did and I found nothing. You expressed that he hurt you but I couldn’t find what it was that he did that was abusive or wrong.

    If you would like to examine this with me, and I am an ex CBT client/ patient, not a psychotherapist. If you would like to examine this with me in the context of self help, please let me know. If you would, can you share what it is that he actually said and done to you that was hurtful and wrong?

    anita

    #99502
    flyby
    Participant

    I got a masters, now career in something totally unrelated. In college however I was interested in cog neuro and did a lot of brain imaging studies.

    Things he did that hurt me.
    1. He didn’t tell me he was in a relationship with someone while we were sleeping together (2 times, at least)
    2. He kept me isolated from his friends and family for 10 years (although before new york, this never happened)
    3. He did not reciprocate sexually for the first several years we were together.
    4. He only wanted to stay in and never do anything outside his apartment with me, but was fun with everyone else.
    5. His only communications with me were through email while he was at work 9-6 M-F. They were however frequent and always reciprocated, still it was a controlled conversation behind screens. I never got a phone call, or that many texts.
    6. After dealing with my mothers death and other downers in my life he said I was too negative and not fun.
    7. He encouraged me sexually, which I was fine with… but then used it against me as a negative quality
    8. Refusing to listen when I asked him to stay away so many times before.

    didn’t reciprocate

    #99523
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear flyby:

    You are currently 35, I understand. You had a 20 year on and off relationship with this man. So the relationship started when you were 15? You grew up with him, you wrote, had the same friends. During these 20 years you had one long term relationship and a few others. At some point he moved to NYC and sometime later you moved there too, not so to be with him, but it so happened. You wrote that his selfish behavior started in NYC. As teenagers you shared friends but in NYC he spent time with you in his apartment and did not mix you and his friends. I hope I got it right so far. You wrote that you believe he was a bad person but at times you saw progress, him trying to improve but each time he improved, it didn’t last long. You think that maybe you represented shame and guilt for him.

    You wrote on this thread that you had faith in him loving you because no matter what you kept getting back together. Above though you wrote that he refused to listen when you asked him to stay away so many times before.

    Twenty years is a long, long time. And it was on and many times, it was off. Starting at teenage years and now in mid thirties, both having relationship elsewhere during that time. It would be hard to follow the on and off story of all those years.

    One point you made is that his selfish behavior started in NYC. Does that mean that the list above, 1-8 applies to NYC and on? When did you move to NYC: how many years ago?

    The friends he kept you away from in NYC are not the same friends where you grew up, correct? Did he tell you a about those friends? What did you know about those friends or … how did you know anything about them. who they were..? Did he have family in NYC? Did you meet his family before NYC… so many questions…

    anita

    #99531
    flyby
    Participant

    and I was trying to simplify it.

    We met when I was a freshman playing travel soccer with his sister at separate schools,. He was 1 year older and her ride to practice, like every day and weekend. They were a family of 6 and his youngest sister (by 8 years) is his best friend here in New York.

    From 16-20something we had the same friends from home, we ended up at the same partied, and we ended up with each other at the end of the night. We lived apart but stayed in contact as genuine friends, but I was living around the country with a long term boyfruend for my studies and career. To note, I never cheated on my long term relationships with this person.
    at 25 newly single, 2 years after my mom died, and fresh out of grad school, I ended up in NYC where he already was/had been since 18 in college.

    In New York, for 10 years n New York now, We are both 35. At first I was still dealing with my Mom so not interested in a relationship. He was into partying, socializing, and he had a girlfriend the first 3 years, but I only heard about her later when my friend warned me. It happened again, but at that point we were not sexually active (boundary established).

    In New York I never was introduced to any of his friends. at first it was because I was the ‘other woman’, but then it continued for those 10 years. I only met his roommates, who kept his ‘dirty little secret’.

    6 years ago his 8 year younger sister, his best friend, not the one I played soccer with at 15, moved to New York. They had a great time and shared friends, but he never involved me in her life. The last time I saw her, was sneaking around her when I was 18 back home.

    he only communicated with me through email the whole time. With or without a girlfriend constantly. His social life is an escape from a boring finance job, which pays well, but is ultimately boring.

    #99544
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear flyby:

    The problematic relationship with him (where the list of 1-8 is relevant to) started when you were 25 (and he was 26) in NYC. For the first 3 years of this NYC relationship he had another girlfriend and you were “the other woman”-

    Am I correct: three years?

    This would explain his motivation for #2, 4 and maybe #5 on your list above.

    My thoughts at this point: if this correct, he was/ is not a decent man, to be having an intimate physical relationship with two women at the same time, hiding this fact from one or the two of you.

    And it is also true, that you either knew of the other woman, or, being the intelligent woman that you are, could have known by the suspicious nature of his behavior (#2, 4 and maybe #5). Either way, you accepted your position in his life. By accepting these (#2 and 4, at the least), you justified, in his mind, his own disrespect of you.

    And so, disrespecting you, not recognizing your worth and value, this would explain all the other items on your list, including not respecting the boundaries you set with him.

    There is a lot more to this, to the concept of being in an intimate relationship with a person who disrespects you, who doesn’t think of you as valuable, a whole lot more. If you agree, this is definitely something to work on in the therapy you are about to have.

    If you agree with the principle here, I would like to communicate with you further about this, as I was with people who disrespected me terribly myself, in the past, and having this personal experience can make it possible for you and I to help each other understand more, see more what needs to be seen.

    anita

    #99595
    jim
    Participant

    still stuck! Relationship came to an end months ago! And I have tried everything! Going to the gym everyday, work a lot to stay busy! I even went on a few dates to try to get her off my mind! I cant function, concentrate, I have no reason to move on or go any further! cant sleep! all I do is think about her! I can’t stand it! need help!

    #99606
    Anonymous
    Guest

    * Dear jim: Can you start a new thread (or bring up an old one that already exists)? I would like to reply to you there and have this thread dedicated to the original poster.
    anita

    #99690
    flyby
    Participant

    Yes, I believe I was in an intimate relationship with someone who disrespected me and did not value me. It took me a long time to realize this, but when I did it is why I left many times and refuse to continue if changes weren’t present.

    I’m sorry you also have had to deal with people who had treated you poorly? Was it a lot of people, or was it just one person in particular? Were you able to set boundaries and have a voice, or was it be just to start over.

    Im wondering if it is possible for people who do treat you poorly to actually let got of all that guilt or if the majority are just so selfish it doesn’t matter.

    #99692
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear flyby:

    Regarding your last point: if it is possible for people who treat (you/ me/ another) poorly to “let go of all that guilt”-

    This is my experience and understanding: when a person, X, does not value Y, thing, animal or person, X feels no guilt over treating Y poorly. When you, flyby, don’t value a piece of cake, maybe because it is old or unhealthy, then you will throw it in the garbage. On the other hand, if someone you really like gave you a freshly made piece of cake, a small piece made with care, you won’t throw it in the garbage, would you? Once you threw the first piece of cake in the garbage, you are not likely to feel guilt. But if by accident the second piece of cake falls to the ground and gets mixed with dirt, you will feel guilty or badly. Because you valued the second piece of cake.

    Same with people. If X values Y, and treats Y poorly, becoming aware of the treatment later, then X will feel guilty. If X doesn’t value Y, and treats Y poorly, well… it is what you do when you don’t value something.

    Only more …evolved, decent people understand that people have inherent value, a humane worth that shouldn’t be disrespected. For a whole lot of people, this is not so.

    Whenever X hurts Y intentionally- or unintentionally but repeatedly, not paying attention to Y hurting- it means X does not value Y.

    Regarding earlier points in your last post, later perhaps. For now, what do you think about what I wrote so far here?

    anita

    #99699
    flyby
    Participant

    So then it is possible for X to feel guilt, but only if X values Y.
    And X does not value Y if X treats treats Y poorly?

    I mean logically it makes sense. The harder part I’m having is understanding why X would only treat Y poorly and not Z or Q? Is it because Y devalues themself, so X does as well? Does X view Z and Q with actual value and not value Y, or is value only what X can get from Y, Z and Q?

    #99700
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear flyby:

    It is my certain belief that the fact that X treats Y poorly it is not an indication that Y is lacking value. This is most important for me to deliver to you, this conviction of mine.

    X treats Y poorly because X is not a decent person. As the indecent person that X is, he values people who represent for him what he does value. And this is the point: X values some things, for example money. So if Z has lots of money, X will value Z. If W is financially broke, X will not value W.

    X may value being rejected because as a child (this is an example, throwing possibilities around), X was rejected by his mother and his lifetime aim has been to please a difficult to please woman, representing his mother. So X will value a woman who gives him little to no attention and will not value a woman that is very available to him.

    The list of what X may value can go on and on, and so he values the person who carries that value that he holds in high esteem, money, hard-to-please, good looks, certain nationality or race, a last name, someone submissive, someone aggressive, etc. etc.

    If Y devalues herself, X might like it very much and when Y stands up for herself, X may leave as X values shyness, “I am less than you” stance.

    And depends who is available. Most people are still looking for someone, so depending on what woman is available, what is on the menu, what is available. Choice then is limited to what is available.

    What do you think?

    anita

    #99701
    darreb
    Participant

    Some people have no feelings though and can turn them off and dont feel no guilt at all

    #99723
    flyby
    Participant

    Choice being limited to what’s available is exactly whats wrong with online dating… too many choices.

    The value argument helps put it in perspective. I guess I wonder if X ultimately does not value themself, and if that ever really changes?

Viewing 15 posts - 16 through 30 (of 31 total)

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