Home→Forums→Relationships→Feeling Stuck in my Relationship
- This topic has 5 replies, 5 voices, and was last updated 8 years, 3 months ago by Anonymous.
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September 1, 2016 at 12:24 am #113879Miss TeeParticipant
I have been in a relationship for 4 years, I’m 24 and he’s 27. We have a lot in common, we love many of the same hobbies and enjoy our time spent together. We have lived together for 3 years, and though at first I didn’t feel quite ready to settle down and live with him, those feelings passed as time went on.
He’s an amazing man, caring, considerate and basically everything a girl needs. He basically does everything and anything for me, and I know he’s deeply in love with me. He compliments me all the time and I know he feels deeply attracted to me/ excited by me.
My problem is, I don’t return these feelings quite as deeply, and I’m so confused. Somedays I can see us spending our lives together because we are best friends, other days I wish I was single because I feel like I need more time to figure out who I am as a person before I settle down.My thoughts bounce back and forth between these two things, I love him so much I’ll love him forever and I feel stuck and I need to get out. I have tried to tell him that I sometimes feel weighed down or stuck, but he always justifies it and tells me that my anxiety is playing me. He smothers me with love and affection and pulls me in closer. Then I end up doubting myself and my own feelings, and the cycle repeats.
It’s breaking my heart even imagining us splitting up, I love him so much and care for him deeply. We live in the same home, have two cats together and fit in perfectly with each others families. But I cannot quiet the thoughts in my head that say “you’d be better off single, you’d be more motivated and feel less stuck”.
I am at such a loss at what to do, part of me has accepted our relationship can’t continue and the other part of me would marry him tomorrow.The worst part of this is all is that I am currently living abroad, and returning home in a month. I tried to tell him I feel anxious coming home because I don’t want to feel stuck again and he’s responded basically saying that we will figure it out together. But I want to figure it out on my own.
I am terrified of leaving him and regretting it, but I’m also terrified of looking back and realizing I didn’t do enough with my life.
September 1, 2016 at 4:48 am #113890InkyParticipantHi seeker 1234,
Doing the math here, you met him in college/college age. Most college romances live and die there. As in, statistically, you won’t find your spouse in college (though many do). That’s One.
Then you moved in together. That statistically is a coffin nail in relationships. You are less likely to get married if you live together. That’s Two.
BUT
It sounds like you did have a taste of the good life and did live abroad for a year. So you WERE living your life. And just because you are in a relationship doesn’t mean you haven’t lived your life.
And your BF genuinely sounds like an awesome guy. If you tell him you want a little apartment just for you, you want to travel more, or even that you need a relationship sabbatical (there is a book called Marriage Sabbatical) I’m sure he would be supportive and not get weird about it.
Good Luck,
Inky
- This reply was modified 8 years, 3 months ago by Inky.
September 1, 2016 at 8:33 pm #113978JoshuaParticipantHe’s fallen in the friend zone. He has so much in common with you, that there is nothing left to uncover, no more adventure, no more excitement, no more room for growth. You mesh so perfectly together, that, although you are best friends, he doesn’t seems to offer any more potential as a romantic partner. Inside you feel you have outgrown him. Meaning you have given and received everything this relationship has to offer. This is not something you should feel shame about. It does happen. This is because you spend far too much time together. You are the center of his world, the source of all his happiness and the meaning of his life. This presents a great deal of pressure on you, as he has few aspects of his life that doesn’t involve you. He spends most of his time with you and neglects his friends, and neglects his own pursuits in life. You desire a man who is more independent, who has other aspects to his life which don’t revolve around you. Someone who has a greater sense of mystery, adventure, excitement, and most importantly, someone who offers a greater potential for growth in a romantic partnership. This smothering you speak of, is immense pressure on you, it’s unfair, it’s stressful, and it’s forcing you into a role you should never have to fulfill.
What you should consider first is this, before making your decision think to yourself, can I live without him? Because it’s not fair to him, if you remain friends. So, you either have to cut him loose or commit to fixing this relationship. To try to keep him as a friend will ultimately hurt him, it will lead him on, with a prospect of a distant chance at reuniting and taking another shot at this relationship. He may never admit it, but he will always hope for the opportunity. So, rather than leading him on, he needs to either be cut loose or the two of you need to fix this relationship. Now, only do this if you can’t live without him.
To salvage the relationship is going to involve a commitment from both of you. He needs to free you from that burden of being the center of his world, instead, he needs to spend more time with his friends, inject a little more testosterone in his daily activities. He should spend more time enjoying life separately from you. He needs to invest more time on himself, pursue a career that gives his life purpose and satisfaction. He needs more time with the guys. The two of you became vanilla, precisely because you are together too much.
Next, you should encourage him to take a leadership role with the relationship, that means planning dates without your input, that means spontaneity, that means encouraging him whenever possible to take charge, to be more assertive. This will move your relationship in a much more exciting direction.Now if you decide to leave him, don’t fall in the trap for the bad boy, the alpha male. You will find yourself more attracted to this outspoken, persistent, adventurous type; but you are being led astray nine times out of ten. You will be attracted to the alpha male precisely because he will be the opposite of your current boyfriend. But this could quickly lead you into a very physically abusive relationship, so you need to guard yourself against this. There are some red flags to search for: jealousy, overly-protective, overly assertive, rebellious, confrontational, controlling, persistent to where he doesn’t accept no for an answer, the list goes on, it all comes down to domineering tendencies.
Well I hope this helps!
September 2, 2016 at 4:24 am #113987AnonymousInactiveHi Seeker,
Other than being a bit smothering, your guy seems pretty great. I don’t think you need to break this off. Maybe you can find ways to feel a little more freedom within your relationship. Maybe even just more time on your own. A hobby that he’s not part of. A half-hour walk every evening, on your own to clear your head. Would that feel better?
You’re living abroad so it doesn’t seem like he’s got you pinned down or anything. Has being away shed any light on what freedom you feel you’re missing? What is it you want to do with your life that being in a relationship is keeping you from?
September 2, 2016 at 6:05 am #113993JoshuaParticipantAnd remember, complete separation is just a pause button on the relationship, a year, 2 years, 5 years. You will still have the same impression of the relationship as you did when you decided to get some space. It hasn’t addressed any of the issues that are causing your unhappiness. The relationship will still end up back on the same course that led you to escape. Both of you need to work towards a different course, one that gives both of your lives fulfillment.
September 2, 2016 at 10:43 am #114028AnonymousGuestDear seeker1234:
Your being-stuck feelings are very strong and cannot be ignored. To examine those further: did you have these feelings before, in another relationship? In relationship with a parent/s?
anita
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